Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Journey To The End Of The Earth
African Birdlife
|September/October 2021
After being thrown from my bed for the third time, I decided to get up and find a vantage point to better enjoy the storm. As I walked down the swaying corridor and up the stairs with the gait of a drunken sailor, I began to reconsider my decision to go outside. It was a doubt quickly stubbed as I jumped through the heavy metal door leading outside moments before it smashed closed behind me with a deep roll of the ship.

There, between the ominous storm clouds and furious white horses racing across the Southern Ocean, glided a gigantic male Wandering Albatross. Without a single wing beat, he dipped in and out of the waves, navigating the angry storm with an unstudied calmness until he effortlessly overtook the ship and disappeared into the distance. The short encounter was surreal – the beautiful and graceful creature seemed out of place in such a turbulent environment, but of course this is the natural habitat of the albatross and so many other seabirds.
On Christmas Day 2020, I set sail for Antarctica on the SA Agulhas II. I had been invited by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment to participate in the voyage as a seabird biologist from BirdLife South Africa. I had been tasked with assisting Makhudu Masotla, a seabird scientist from the department, with the annual at-sea seabird ship-based observations and Emperor Penguin and Snow Petrel colony counts. Having dedicated much of my adult life to seabird research, I cannot explain the excitement I felt at visiting seabird colonies in the most pristine yet extreme environment in the world. Although constantly stoking my passion to contribute to seabird conservation and science, the human impacts on our nation’s seabird breeding colonies are evident and concerning. The footprint left behind from human activities is vast and ranges from starving African Penguins washing up on our coastline to albatross chicks being nibbled to death by house mice on Marion Island. A trip to Antarctica promised not only adventure, but a chance to see seabirds in an environment largely untouched by mankind.
Bu hikaye African Birdlife dergisinin September/October 2021 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
African Birdlife'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

African Birdlife
stories begin at EYE LEVEL
ALTHOUGH I HAVE been taking photographs since 1998, it wasn't until 2019 that my hobby evolved into a serious pursuit. That's when I began to see photography not just as a means of capturing a moment, but as a form of art - something that can stir emotion, spark wonder and tell a deeper story.
1 mins
July/August 2025
African Birdlife
ALBERT the Wandering Albatross
Ahoy, shipmates, grab a pew and let me spin my yarn.
3 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
I'll be back...
Southern African populations of oxpeckers were hit by triple hammer blows during the late 19th century and much of the 20th.
2 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
BINDO and SABAP2
A match made in data science
2 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
PREDATORS of the pan
As regular visitors to Mabuasehube in the Botswanan sector of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, we have often seen vulture feathers lying in the area of the waterhole at Mpayathutlwa Pan and have frequently observed a pair of black-backed jackals in the vicinity.
1 min
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
Jacana & the egg thief
While on a photo expedition in the Richtersveld National Park with my brother Peter, we were watching one particular African Jacana on the Gariep River.
2 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
A STRIPE FOR ANY OTHER PURPOSE?
Uncovering the adaptive complexities of falcons' malar stripes
2 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
grassland GLADIATORS
The Secretarybird is a highly soughtafter species for most birders on their first visit to Africa. It looks so strange, like a cross between a stork and an eagle. Even though it is widespread, occurring in almost any suitable habitat (grassland, open savanna and Karoo shrubland), it's generally uncommon.
1 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
SECRETS SKY
Jessica Wilmot is the driving force behind BirdLife South Africa's Flyway and Migrants Project, working across borders to safeguard some of the planet's most threatened species and habitats. Supporting BirdLife International's East Atlantic Flyway Initiative, Jessica is at the heart of efforts to keep our skies alive with birds, particularly the enigmatic European Roller, which is her current focus and passion.
6 mins
July/August 2025

African Birdlife
Southern SIGHTINGS
Autumn is generally known to be quieter in terms of rarities across southern Africa, but the review period still had a few surprises for us, including a new species for the subregion. As always, none of the records included here have been adjudicated by any of the subregion's Rarities Committees.
3 mins
July/August 2025
Translate
Change font size