| Large 
                      seabird with long narrow wings adapted for gliding and a 
                      wingspan of up to 3 m/10 ft, mainly found in the southern 
                      hemisphere. Albatrosses feed mainly on squid and fish, and 
                      nest on remote oceanic islands. Albatrosses can cover enormous 
                      distances, flying as far as 16,100 km/10,000 mi in 33 days, 
                      or up to 640 km/600 mi in one day. They continue flying 
                      even after dark, at speeds of up to 53.5 kph/50 mph, though 
                      they may stop for an hour's rest and to feed during the 
                      night.
 
 
 The method of flight of albatrosses is interesting in that 
                      they may maintain gliding flight without flapping their 
                      wings for hours on end. To do this they make use of the 
                      steady trade winds, and the fact that nearer to the surface 
                      of the water the air flows more slowly, reaching full speed 
                      much higher up. They dive downwind, turn, and rise up into 
                      progressively faster-moving air. The faster the air flows 
                      over their wings, the greater the lift; in this way they 
                      can reach the heights from which they started without flapping 
                      their wings. They do, however, lose ground downwind, so 
                      they drift slowly across the ocean with the prevailing winds. 
                      The birds seldom come ashore, except at breeding time.
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