Southern Giant Petrel

The Southern Giant Petrel: Ogre of the High Seas

The Procellariiformes have always seemed to me one of the more distinguished orders of birds. The root of the word 鈥 procellarum 鈥 means 鈥渧iolent wind鈥 or 鈥渟torm,鈥 and members of the order, which includes albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, and the like, are famous for their flight: The largest of them, the Wandering and Royal albatrosses, have the longest wingspan of any bird, at up to 11 feet. With their wings locked in position, albatrosses can glide for hours without flapping, dipping and climbing with and against the winds. It鈥檚 called dynamic soaring, and it鈥檚 the stuff of poetry. 聽

No one鈥檚 writing poems about the .

The Southern Giant Petrel and its cousin, the Northern Giant Petrel, are the exiles of their order鈥攖he lumbering brutes of the Procellariiformes. (They don鈥檛 even share the same taxonomic family as the albatrosses鈥攖hey鈥檙e stuck down with the shearwaters, in the Procellariidae.) They have a great deal working against them, starting with their appearance: Southern Giant Petrels are smaller but stockier than most albatrosses, aerodynamically unlikely, with thick necks, brown feathers, and a hunchback, at least in flight; an unfortunate salt gland lies atop their bill like the barrel of a pistol, or some sad malignancy (it is in fact a way to excrete excess salt).

Then there鈥檚 the behavior: Ranging over the sub-Antarctic and sub-tropical oceans, Southern Giant Petrels are known as the vultures of the sea, and are frequently seen () emerging from the viscera of an elephant seal or sea lion carcass, their speckled or pasty heads awash in blood and clotted with gore. It鈥檚 all pretty grotesque, and the birds鈥 blank-looking eyes, which have icy white or pale blue irises, only heighten the savage effect. When scavenging options are slim they鈥檒l use the hook on their beak to capture and eviscerate squid, fish, young penguins鈥攁nd even their golden-child counterparts, albatrosses鈥攁nd there are accounts of Southern Giant Petrels bashing seabirds against the surf or holding them underwater to drown them. To top it off, Southern Giant Petrels are known to projectile-vomit their putrid stomach oils at anyone they don鈥檛 want around, which led aggrieved sailors to stick them with a less-than-flattering nickname: stinkpots.

Not many scientists have chosen to study Southern Giant Petrels, which seems surprising to me鈥攖hey may not be muses, but I鈥檇 argue Macronectes giganteus鈥 beastliness gives it its own macabre charisma. And I wonder if, in addition to the usual logistical challenges of studying seabirds, part of this scientific aversion to the stinkpots should be blamed on Robert Cushman Murphy.

You can think of Murphy as the patron saint of seabird studies. Born 1887, he was the first American ornithologist not only to study seabirds, but also to popularize them. During a long career at New York鈥檚 American Museum of Natural History, he sailed far from his home on Long Island to the southern oceans, cruising from South Georgia Island to both South American coasts to New Zealand, collecting specimens, making detailed observations of behavior, and then writing books with a literary grace that would never pass scientific muster these days.

But for all his enthusiasm for seabirds, Murphy had little good to say about the giant petrel. 鈥淚ts appearance and habits are alike unprepossessing,鈥 he wrote in his great treatise, Oceanic Birds of South America. 鈥淎 bird of prey, it is, nevertheless, ungainly and uncouth, lacking the beauty and dash which win admiration for even the most bloodthirsty of falcons and eagles.鈥 He mocked the petrel鈥檚 鈥渟upposed courtship,鈥 when males 鈥渉ideously smeared with blood and grease鈥 danced like stupid peacocks before indifferent females. And, perhaps most galling for a Procellariiform, he questioned their flying prowess (referring to the bird by an old name, the giant fulmar):

At sea, the Giant Fulmar is a 鈥榮tiff flyer,鈥 showing to best advantage only in high winds. It is a far less agile and graceful bird than mollymauks [a type of albatross]聽of the same size, and it assumes particularly queer and awkward attitudes when descending to the ocean under the handicap of a light breeze.

What chance does the Southern Giant Petrel have at redemption if even seabirds鈥 greatest champion could find so little to love?

Murphy would in sum pronounce the giant petrel 鈥渟carcely more popular as a bird than a shark is as a fish.鈥 It鈥檚 an unfortunate comparison for the petrels, but it鈥檚 a telling one, too, because both Murphy鈥檚 scorn and sailors鈥 mocking nickname for the bird may have masked another feeling鈥攆ear. During the 19th century, the 鈥渟tinkpots鈥 were in fact the scourge of sailors: They attacked seamen who fell overboard, and were known to use the hook at the end of their bills to target their faces and eyes. There were accounts of sailors having their arms cut to ribbons as they tried to defend themselves, and one tale told of a boatswain who, in 1840, fell off the HMS Erebus during an Antarctic survey, and was immediately set upon by a large, frenzied flock of giant petrels who assaulted him so viciously that he sank before the ship could double back and pick him up. Sometimes contempt is the price an animal pays for reminding humans that we can be prey just like anything else.