SECOND UPDATE
Voting is open until 17h00 (New Zealand Standard Time), Sunday 15 November
Vote here by clicking on "Pick me" on the five photos you choose (hint: click on Antipodean Albatross as your No. 1)
The Live Ocean Charitable Trust writes "... we'd really, really like a win for our great ocean voyager, the Toroa/Antipodean albatross. The winning bird gets its moment in the spotlight and shining a light on the issues it faces at sea is seriously helpful. The future is looking even more uncertain for this amazing seabird with recent DOC estimates being revised upwards to show we're losing 2,300 of these birds each year unnecessarily".
Once more, BirdLife’s partner in New Zealand, Forest & Bird, is running its popular Bird of the Year competition (‘BOTY2020’). This time three procellariform seabirds have been chosen, (along with many other New Zealand birds) as eligible to receive votes. They are:
Antipodean Albatross or Toroa Diomedea antipodensis
Black Petrel or Taiko Procellaria parkinsoni
Hutton’s Shearwater or Kaikōura Tītī Puffinus huttonii
Both the albatross and petrel are ACAP-listed species; all three breed only in New Zealand and are considered to be globally threatened.
“Voting is based on an instant runoff voting (IRV) system. When you vote, you can rank up to five of your favourite birds, with #1 indicating your favourite bird, #2 indicating your second favourite bird, and so on”. Voting will be from 2 - 15 November. Read more about the voting system here.
The globally Endangered (and Nationally Critical) Antipodean Albatross is No. 1 on the ACAP Information Officer’s voting list (as it was in 2019). Fitting as the nominate subspecies that breeds only on Antipodes Island – where its population continues to decline – has been identified by ACAP’s Advisory Committee as a Priority Population for conservation management. Enthusiasm in New Zealand has led to it already having its own Facebook Group – Albatross for Bird of the Year #VoteToroa.
A colour-banded Antipodean Albatross stretches its wings on Antipodes Island, photograph by Kath Walker
Read an illustrated species summary for the Antipodean Albatross written especially for this year’s inaugural World Albatross Day.
No procellariform seabird has won since the competition commenced in 2005. Time for a change?
John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 24 September 2020, updated 02 & 13 November 2020