'O ll OM IE ]D IE.
DIOMEDEA FULIGINOSA, Gmel.
Sooty Albatros.
Diomedea fuliginosa, Gmel. Edit, o f Lion. Syst. Na t., vol. i, p. 568.—Temm. PI. Col. 469.—Lath. Ind. Om., vol. ii.
p. 791.—-List of Birds in Brit. Mus. Colli, p a rt iii. p. 166.
palpebrata, Forst. Drawings, No. 102.
-------------antárctica, Banks’s Drawings, No. 26.
fusca, Aud. Birds of Amer., vol. iv. pi. ccccvii.—lb . Orn. Bio., vol. v. p. 116.—lb . Syn. Birds of N.
Am e r., p . 335.
Black Albatros, Linn. Trans., vol. xii. p. 489.
Sooty Albatros, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. v. p. 309.—Forst. Voy., vol. i. p. 91.—Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. x. p. 54.
T h e Diomedea fuliginosa is one of the commonest species of the genus, and is universally distributed over
all the temperate latitudes to the southward of the equator. On referring to my notes I find that it first
came under, my notice on the 23rd of July 1838, in lat. 31° 10' S., long. 34° W., when three examples were
seen flying round the ship, which they continued to do until we doubled the Cape and entered the
South Indian Ocean, on the 14th o f August. It was never very numerous; some days passed over without
more than a single individual having made its appearance, aud the greatest number that I saw at any one
time was six or eigh t; it was constantly seen between the island of St. Paul’s and New South Wales, as
well as at the entrance of Bass’s Straits, between Van Diemen’s Land and Cape Howe. On my voyage
homeward it was noticed on the 6th of May in lat. 40° S., long. 154° W .; in the Pacific near Cape Horn
on the 20th of May in lat. 50 S., long. 90° W., and more abundantly in the Atlantic on the 12th of June
in lat. 41° S., long. 34j° W.
In its actions and mode o f flight this bird differs very considerably from all the other species of Albatros,
its aerial evolutions being far more easy, its flight much higher and its stoops more rapid ; it is, moreover,
the only species that passes directly over the ship, which it frequently does in blowing weather, often poising
itself for several seconds over the mast-head, as if inquisitively viewing the scene below; it is at this
moment it offers so inviting a mark for the gunner, that it often forfeits its life, and if shot when a little
to windward of the vessel, it is almost certain to fall on board. The cuneated form of the tail, which is
peculiar to this species, together with its slight and small legs and more delicate structure, clearly indicate
that it is the most aerial species of the genus.
Latham states that it breeds on “ the island of Tristan d’Acunha, is gregarious, many of them building
their nests close to each other; in the area of half an acre were reckoned upwards o f a hundred. The
nest is of mud, raised five or six inches, and slightly depressed at the top ; when the young birds are more
than half-grown, they are covered with a whitish down ; they stand on their respective hillocks like statues,
till approached close, when they make a strange clattering with their beaks, and if touched, squirt a deluge
of foetid oily fluid from the nostrils.”
The whole of the plumage deep sooty grey, darkest on the face, wings and ta il; shafts of the primaries
and tail-feathers white; eyes very dark greyish brown, surrounded, except anteriorly, by a beautiful mark of
white; bill jet-black, with a longitudinal line of white along the under mandible, this white portion not
being horny like the rest of the bill, but composed of fleshy cartilage, which becomes nearly black soon after
death; feet white, slightly tinged with fleshy purple.
The figure represents a male about two-thirds of the natural size.