BBC Wildlife Magazine

Jabs boost for rare seabirds

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From the 1980s, avian cholera – perhaps carried by feral cattle – has caused mass deaths of albatross chicks on Amsterdam Island in the southern Indian Ocean. These include the young of the Amsterdam albatross and two-thirds of the world population of Indian yellow-nosed albatross (both endangered). Now, French ecologists have developed a vaccine that, in field trials, has greatly boosted chick survival.

Amsterdam Island is one of the most remote places in the world, sitting more than 3,000km away from its nearest neighbouri­ng large land masses. Its isolation made it a hotspot for evolution of some bird species found nowhere else. Several of these are now extinct, but 40–50 pairs of Amsterdam albatrosse­s cling on.

Using material taken from a dead sooty albatross, a research team, led by Vincent Bourret, developed a vaccine, which they injected into very young Indian yellow-nosed albatross chicks on the island. The results, published last year, show that just under half of the vaccinated birds lived to fledging, compared with around one in seven unvaccinat­ed chicks.

As well as giving a potential boost to albatrosse­s on Amsterdam Island, the researcher­s say that vaccinatio­n could be a key tool to protect endangered seabirds elsewhere from disease. Kenny Taylor

FIND OUT MORE Conservati­on Letters article: bit.ly/2QdsAkA

 ??  ?? Indian yellow-nosed albatrosse­s have benefitted from the new vaccine.
Indian yellow-nosed albatrosse­s have benefitted from the new vaccine.

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