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Did I see a Wandering Albatross without seeing it?
Looking through my pics from the last pelagic,while preparing for a blog post, I find this:
I took the photograph at 11:29 on June 27. Only one shot. I was shooting a lot of birds as they came by. With these proportionally extremely slender wings, completely dark body and a pale face with a dark eye - it fits perfectly to juvenile of the Wandering Albatross group. The only negative thing is that all forms of Wandering Albatross show this pattern and therefore it is not possible to give the origin of this bird.
There were plenty of photographers on board, hopefully someone else has got more detailed photos.
If this can be 100% confirmed from this picture it would be the first record for Peru. Let's see what the seabird experts say.
UPDATE: The experts spoke. First out was Alvaro Jaramillo on the Birding Peru listserv. He noted that I had totally misjudged the features of the bird. The white is not the face, but rather the bill and the dark spot is not the eye but a feature on the bill.
The pale area is the bill, and you are seeing some of the dark division between the naricorn and the culminicorn, as well as the nostrils head on (the round dark area).
Alvaro first suggested a Giant Petrel.
Sergio Nolazco was fast to suggest it was a Procellaria Petrel and suggested either Westland or Parkinson - both that have dark tips of the bill. Alvaro agreed, but suggested White-chinned Petrel instead, as it is not the tip that is dark.
Meanwhile the discussion is hot on my Facebook page and the Seabird-News and Pelagics lists.
Chris Savigny also suggests that the bird is flying my way.
I see, it is an optical illusion! When I first looked at the picture, it seemed to me that the bird was flying away, but it is actually flying towards the camera, and I am looking straight into the tube of the tubenose!
Four contendants are up in the semi-final White-chinned Petrel, Southern Giant Petrel, Westland Petrel and Parkinson's Petrel and there are contributions on the ID also from Phil Hansbro, Gyorgy Szimuly, Benjamin Coulter, Brian Patteson, Juan Mazar Barnett, Alan Henry, Chris Benesh, Doug Hanna, Richard Baxter, Chris Gaskin, Joseph Morlan, Tim Reid and Trevor Hardaker. What a fine set of pelagic birders.
George Armistead hit the nail on the head by highlighting again that bird is flying towards the camera and providing this link of a White-chinned Petrel of almost the same angle of the head.
All of a sudden it is all clear.
White-chinned Petrel looks like the most logical answer. What is more...it was the only one of the semi-finalists that all onboard agreed on having seen. In fact we saw plenty White-chinned Petrels and none of the others.
For those interested I have started a group on Facebook for pelagic birding. This discussion could have taken place there.
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=86878741545
Check it out if you are on Facebook. The group has 741 members as I write this.

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{ 7 comments }
Gunnar: Why isn't this a Parkinson's Petrel (or other large dark petrels)? The bill seems light with a dark tip and body is very dark. The narrowness of the wings may be due to angle?? It seems too chunky for albatross.
Doug: It is most likely a White-chinned Petrel. See the update above!
This was a very good excersize. And a lot of good seabirders took part in the forums I participate in. I guess I have to add Wandering Albatross to one of those 1000 I have to see before I die! Keep on dreaming, Gunnar.
Gunnar, i recommend you a lot this book for pelagic birding trips: ALBATROSSES, PETRELS & SHEARWATERS. 2007. FROM ONLEY & SCOFIELD (PRINCETON FIELD GUIDES).
CHEERS,
SERGIO
Thanks Sergio
I got it. I just got confused with the angle of the photo at my first look. It looked to me as it flew away....and the white part was the face and the dark spot the eye....
My brain had locked at that image...
You know, it is like that image of an old woman or a young girl
depending how one put the focus.
Looking closer one sees that the bird is flying towards the camera.
Surely your photo is too light for a gony (the size of a sheep) or even a nelly (the size of a sheep-dog)- you should have noticed them as you took the picture. I favour a Procellaria, probably White-chinned, surely not unusual in those parts?
Bill, you are absolutely right. I should have noticed the size of an aAlbatross or a Giant Petrel when taking it. I was just blown away to see the pic, which I mis-judged as flying away....
Surely your photo is too light for a gony (the size of a sheep) or even a nelly (the size of a sheep-dog)- you should have noticed them as you took the picture. I favour a Procellaria, probably White-chinned, surely not unusual in those parts?
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