1. Short-tailed shearwaters12345:
    • Migrate every year to the North Pacific Ocean and reach the Arctic Ocean north of Alaska before returning to their colonies in September.
    • Their migratory path is more directly north-south, rather than the previously thought figure-of-eight around the Pacific Ocean.
    • They travel about 15 – 17 thousand kilometers in each direction annually.
    • Movement across the Pacific Ocean Basin is particularly rapid, with some individuals covering 11,000 km in 13 days.
    Learn more:
    Short-tailed shearwaters migrate every year to the North Pacific Ocean and reach the Arctic Ocean, north of Alaska before returning to their colonies in September. Their migratory path is now known to be more directly north-south, and not the figure-of-eight, around the Pacific Ocean as previously thought.
    www.antarctica.gov.au/about-antarctica/animals/fl…
    Short-tailed shearwaters migrate to the North Pacific Ocean every year and reach the Arctic Ocean north of Alaska before returning in September to their colonies in the south. Migrating north-south, rather than figure-eight, around the Pacific Ocean has been established as their true migratory path.
    www.bonorong.com.au/blog/species-spotlight-shor…
    It undergoes transequatorial migration, wintering north of Japan near the Aleutian Islands (U.S.A.), with some individuals moving north of the Bering Strait. The return migration route incorporates the central Pacific, with some individuals moving down the western coast of North America.
    datazone.birdlife.org/species/factsheet/short-taile…
    Short-tailed shearwaters travel about 15 – 17 thousand kilometers in each direction annually. They have been known to fly this remarkable distance in six weeks with movement across the Pacific Ocean Basin being particularly rapid, travelling 11, 000 km in 13 days, a rate of 840km per day.
    nre.tas.gov.au/wildlife-management/fauna-of-tasm…
    MIGRATION The Short-tailed Shcarwater is a circum-Pacific migrant spending the horcal summer in the Northern Pacific region (Fig. l). Sexually immature birds depart from Australia near thc end of March. followed by the breeding birds around mid-April, with the Acdged chicks leaving at the end of April to early May.
    absa.asn.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Cor-Vol-1…
     
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    Short-tailed shearwater - Wikipedia

    Each austral winter, the shearwaters migrate to the seas off the Aleutian Islands and Kamchatka. In the austral spring, they travel down the coast of California before crossing the Pacific back to Australia. In 2020, a long distance vagrant was found in Ireland. This marked the first confirmed sighting of the species in … See more

    The short-tailed shearwater or slender-billed shearwater (Ardenna tenuirostris; formerly Puffinus tenuirostris), also called yolla or moonbird, and commonly known as the muttonbird in Australia, is the most abundant See more

    This shearwater appears to be related to the sooty and great shearwaters, which are also blunt-tailed, black-billed species, but its precise relationships are obscure (Austin, 1996; Austin et al., 2004). These are among the larger species of shearwater, which … See more

    • Gillson, Greg (2008) Field separation of Sooty and Short-tailed Shearwaters off the west coast of North America Birding 40(2):34-40 See more

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    Each parent feeds the single chick for 2–3 days and then leaves for up to three weeks in search of food. These foraging trips can cover a distance of 1,500 km (930 mi) and mean the chick may … See more

    The practice of harvesting the various species of bird known as muttonbirds is known as muttonbirding. The name muttonbird was first used by the early settlers on See more

     
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  4. Short-tailed Shearwater | Audubon Field Guide

  5. Short-tailed shearwater - Phillip Island Nature Park

  6. Short-tailed shearwater migration time - Penguin …

    WEBMar 16, 2022 · Every year around 1.4 million short-tailed shearwaters (also known as biyadin or muttonbirds) migrate from the Bering Sea near Alaska back to Phillip Island (Millowl) to breed. They fly 16,000 km in less than 3 …

  7. Short-Tailed Shearwater - Penguin Foundation

    WEBIn September each year, over one million Short-tailed Shearwaters arrive at Phillip Island to breed from their Aleutian Island feeding grounds (near Alaska, USA), most completing this extraordinary 15,000km migration in …

  8. The Short-tailed Shearwater Great Migration - Penguin …

    WEBApr 17, 2023 · The Short-tailed shearwater is a mid-sized migratory bird, and one of just a few that come to Australia to breed. These birds - also known as muttonbirds - travel around the world, migrating each year north from …

  9. Short-tailed Shearwater | Department of Natural …

    WEBDistribution and migration. The short-tailed shearwater is the most abundant Australian seabird. Approximately 23 million short-tailed shearwaters breed in about 285 colonies in south-eastern Australia from …

  10. Short-tailed shearwater - Australian Antarctic Program

    WEBShort-tailed shearwaters migrate every year to the North Pacific Ocean and reach the Arctic Ocean, north of Alaska before returning to their colonies in September. Their migratory path is now known to be more directly north …

  11. Trans-equatorial migration of Short-tailed Shearwaters …

    WEBDec 1, 2014 · Here, we present the first tracks of the trans-equatorial migration of Short-tailed Shearwaters from a colony on Great Dog Island, Tasmania, Australia.