- Recently Light-mantled Albatross, a species native to the Antarctic seas, was recorded in Tamil Nadu.
 - The location where the Albatross was spotted is part of the Palk Bay and near the Gulf of Mannar, an ‘Important Bird Area’ on India’s southeast coast.
 - This record from the Palk Bay side of Rameswaramisland is significant, and it throws up new challenges to researchers once these Antarctic birds migrate to Asia.
 - This finding also directs researchers to look for bird migration away from the well-known and established routes and sites.
 - As the nearest recorded site of the bird is around 5,000 km away from Rameswaram, a change in atmospheric pressure may be among the reasons for the Albatross to land on an Indian shore.
 
Light-mantled Albatross
Scientific Name: Phoebetriapalpebrate
- Also, known as the grey-mantled albatross or the light-mantled sooty albatross.
 - Light-mantled albatrosses spend most of their lives in flight. A juvenile may spend many years at sea before returning to breed.
 - The Light-mantled Albatross, with broad pelagic habits, maintains a circumpolar distribution in the Southern Ocean.
 
Appearance:
- Ash coloured with darker areas around the head and lighter areas across the back and wingtips.
 - Distinctive white stripe immediately above the eye.
 - A worldwide population of 21,600 breeding pairs, according to an estimate in 1998.
 - IUCN Red List- Near Threatened
 
SOURCE: THE HINDU,THE ECONOMIC TIMES,MINT
        
        
        
        