“It likely didn’t breed last season because adults lay their egg in spring and the chicks leave the nests by January,” Russell said in an email. “Perhaps it went wandering on its year off and will soon return to the Galapagos to be reunited with its mate for the next season?”
“Who knows how long it will stay around or if it will ever return?” Russell added. “But that’s why these sightings are so special.”
Marshall Iliff, eBird project leader at Cornell University’s Lab of Ornithology, said seabirds such as albatrosses can travel great distances in search of food.
“The odd individual routinely may turn up far from home, even in the wrong hemisphere or exceptionally in the wrong ocean,” Iliff said via email. “Food shortages could prompt a bird to wander, but a single bird could also be a fluke accident. There is no evidence at this point that this is anything but a fluke.”
The International Union for Conservation of Nature calls the bird — the largest in the Galapagos — critically endangered. According to the American Bird Conservancy, its range is restricted to the tropics. It nests on lava fields amid scattered boulders and sparse vegetation.
The life span of the birds can reach 45 years. They feed primarily on fish, squid and crustaceans.