TIERRA DEL FUEGO BIRDING TOURS

Black-browed Albatross

Procellariiformes > Diomedeidae
Thalassarche melanophris

IUCN Red List category

Good birding season

Year-round

Best time to visit

Winter for seabirds; Summer for breeding activity

Records in Tierra del Fuego

4494 observations

571 photos

0 audios

RANGE MAP BY EBIRD

OVERVIEW

About Black-browed Albatross

A robust Southern Ocean “medium-sized albatross” the Black-browed Albatross is one of the most familiar albatrosses thanks to its huge at-sea range, relative abundance, and its tendency to use inshore waters more than many other albatrosses. Adults are striking: a white head, dark back, and a yellow bill with an orange tip, plus the namesake black “brow” around the eye. At sea it often feeds alongside other seabirds, sometimes following boats or cetaceans, and it is famous for far-flung vagrancy, with repeated records in the North Atlantic and Europe.

Conservation note

Globally listed as Least Concern, but that does not mean risk-free. Historically and regionally, major pressures include fishery bycatch (especially longlines) and shifting prey availability; reliance on fishery discards varies among colonies and years. Where best-practice mitigation is applied (bird-scaring lines, line-weighting, night setting, offal management), seabird bycatch has been dramatically reduced in some managed regions—yet trends can still differ by colony/subpopulation, and the Campbell subspecies (impavida) remains of higher conservation concern.

BIRDS IMAGE GALLERY

Black-browed Albatross

Habitat and distribution

Breeds on islands across the Southern Ocean (roughly 46–56°S), including colonies near Cape Horn and the South Atlantic/Subantarctic region (e.g., Malvinas, South Georgia) and several subantarctic islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans (e.g., Crozet, Kerguelen, Heard, Macquarie; also Chilean southern archipelagos). At sea, it ranges widely throughout the Southern Ocean from temperate waters to Antarctic latitudes. Although truly pelagic, it is also regular over shelf and shelf-slope waters and is notably common near coasts, bays, fjords, and even harbors compared with many other albatrosses.

Observation tips

  • Most often encountered at sea, especially over continental shelf and shelf-slope waters.
  • Unlike many albatrosses, it regularly uses inshore waters, entering bays, fjords, and even harbors—particularly in windy conditions.
  • Frequently associates with fishing vessels, where it may follow trawlers or longliners.
  • Often feeds alongside other seabirds and occasionally near cetaceans.
  • In the Southern Ocean, scanning mixed flocks of seabirds over productive waters greatly increases detection chances.

Black-browed Albatross

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