Thursday 1 March 2018

ANTARCTICA




Best place I've ever been too, If you ever get the chance to go there grab it, here's some of my photograph's of my visits there.





South Georgia is an island in the southern Atlantic Ocean that is part of the British Overseas territory of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. The main settlement is Grytviken. South Georgia is 167.4 kilometres long and 1.4 to 37 km wide, it has also has a large colony of up to 60,000 King Penguins at Salisbury Plane.
 


Above
King Penguin's

The Petrel
Old whaling boat a reminder of our shameful past
South Georgia

Antarctic fur Sea
 Happy Days
warm in the Sun



Above
Wilson's storm Petrel

Madeiran storm Petrel

White bellied storm Petrel

Leach's storm Petrel

Antarctic Fulmar


Wandering Albatross

Antarctic Shag

Sub Antarctic Skua


Leopard Seal


 Icebergs and Ice Shapes










Moody sea


Snow Petrel
Snow petrels are pure white birds with jet black beaks and eyes. They are the size of a pigeon and arguably the most beautiful of all the Antarctic birds, the most sort after for your list.  

 Despite their diminutive size are as tough as animal needs to be to survive and even thrive in low temperatures and with a frequently high wind chill.





Cape Petrel

Adelie Penguin

Southern royal Albatross

Sooty Albatross

Yellow nosed Albatross

Sooty Albatross

Black browed Albatross


Wandering Albatross
 On the nest
Pairs of wandering albatrosses mate for life and
 breed every two years. Breeding takes place on
subantarctic islands and commences in early November.
 The nest is a mound of mud and vegetation, and is
 placed on an exposed ridge near the sea. During the
early stages of the chick's development, the parents
 take turns sitting on the nest while the other searches
 for food. Later, both adults hunt for food and visit the chick at irregular intervals.
Wandering albatross has the longest wingspan of
any living bird, typically ranging from 2.51 to 3.5 m
 (8 ft 3 in to 11 ft 6 in), with a mean span of 3.1 m
(10 ft 2 in) in the Bird Island, South Georgia
The longest-winged examples verified have been
 about 3.7 m (12 ft 2 in) Even larger examples have
 been claimed, with two giants reportedly
 measuring 4.22 m (13 ft 10 in) and 5.3 m (17 ft 5 in)
 but these reports remain unverified

The Greeting
 Wandering Albatross



Yellow nosed Albatross


 Above
Tristan Albatross

 Tristan albatrosses are  endemic  to the islands of the Tristan da Cunha   group and more specifically Gough Island. The majority of the world's population nest on Gough Island, around 1500 pairs. On some years a pair breeds on Inaccessible Island.


Inaccessible flightless Rail


The Inaccessible Island Rail is perhaps the coolest bird that I will ever see.  The world’s smallest, still-extant, flightless bird is only found on the aptly-named Inaccessible Island, an island in the Tristan da Cunha archipelago of the south Atlantic Ocean (the largest island in the archipelago is also called Tristan da Cunha but people from the UK will recognize it as St. Helena.  The island is not only inaccessible because of its remote location but also because of the huge cliffs that ring the island, making access to the interior, where Atlantisia rogersi lives, almost as difficult as getting to the island.
 How does an Inaccessible flightless Rail survive?  Well, the sixteen square kilometers of Inaccessible Island on which it lives host, according to the most recent estimates, about 8,400 individuals.  BirdLife International believes that this might be maximum population the species can reach, as it seems to completely saturate its range.
In general it prefers areas where vegetation, boulders or other landscape features at ground level provide tunnels in which to shelter and to breed. It forages in every available habitat including very short vegetation, boulder beaches and marshy areas…The diet comprises a wide range of invertebrates including earthworms and moths, centipedes, and a wide variety of insects and insect larvae, as well as berries and seeds.
 The diminutive and flightless rail which lives on Inaccessible Island and, as far as is known, nowhere else in the Atlantic, or for that matter in the whole world, is in fact not even generically allied to the moorhen-like gallinules just referred to. It is a true rail ; and besides this there is nothing specifically like it known to science, although it may be that certain rails living on islands in the Pacific Ocean may have sprung from the same original stock. It was for these and other reasons, that is referred to an entirely new genus and species, and being naming it in honour of Mr. Rogers, who was the first to procure specimens of it with the object of making it known to science.

 Below
Kerguelen Petrel






Above
Soft plumage Petrel



Above
 Northern giant Petrel


Below
Southern giant Petrel



Above
Spectacled Petrel


Below
 Broad billed Pryon

   

 Above and below
 Brown Booby

Below
Masked Booby


Black Noddy
Below

Below
 Brown Noddy 







The brown noddy is a colonial bird, usually nesting on cliffs, trees, or bushes. It occasionally lays its eggs on the bare ground. The nest itself is usually a platform nest, made of sticks and twigs.

Above
Fairy Tern

Above
Arctic Tern

During the southern summer, it can be found at sea, reaching the northern edge of the Antarctic ice. The Arctic tern is famous for its migration; it flies from its Arctic breeding grounds to the Antarctic and back again each year, the shortest distance between these areas being 19,000 km (12,000 mi).



Above
Great Shearwater
Great Shearwater, like the Sooty Shearwater, follows a circular route, moving up the eastern seaboard of first South and then North America, before crossing the Atlantic in August. It can be quite common off the south-western coasts of Great Britain and Ireland before heading back south again, this time down the eastern littoral of the Atlantic.

 Birds Of Ushuaia Chile

  
Magellanic  Oystercatcher 

  
Imperial blue eyed Shag

Kelp Gull

Dolphin Gull

Ringed Kingfisher

Rufus chested Dotterel

Striated Carcara

Southern Lapwing

Grey flanked Cinclodes

Turkey Vulture



Peregrine Falcon

Chilean Skua

White throated Carcara

Kelp Goose

Black crowned Night Heron

Magellanic Woodpecker