Birda Logo
Features
Birda+
About
Species Guide
Challenges
Shop
loading...
A photo of a Southern Giant Petrel (Macronectes giganteus)
Southern Giant Petrel

Southern Giant Petrel

Macronectes giganteus

The Southern Giant Petrel, Macronectes giganteus, is a formidable presence in the southern oceans. This large seabird, also known colloquially as the Antarctic giant petrel, giant fulmar, stinker, or stinkpot, commands attention with its impressive wingspan stretching between 185 to 205 cm (6 ft 1 in – 6 ft 9 in) and a body length of 86 to 99 cm (34–39 in). Sexual dimorphism is evident, with males typically larger than females. The species exhibits two morphs: the dark morph, with mottled brown plumage and lighter wing edges, and the rarer light morph, predominantly white with minimal black speckling.

Identification Tips

Distinguishing this species in the field, one should note the very large yellow bill tipped with green and the greyish-brown legs. Juveniles of the dark morph begin life with a sooty brown coloration that lightens with age. When in flight, the Southern Giant Petrel has a distinctive hunchbacked silhouette.

Habitat

The Southern Giant Petrel is a bird of the open ocean, breeding on remote islands across the southern hemisphere, from the edge of the Antarctic continent to the subtropics.

Distribution

This species has a broad range, from the icy shores of Antarctica to the warmer waters of Chile, Africa, and Australia. It nests on a variety of islands, with significant populations on the Falkland Islands, South Georgia, and Macquarie Island, among others.

Behaviour

The Southern Giant Petrel is known for its aggressive predatory behavior and scavenging habits. It feeds on a wide range of marine life, including fish, krill, and squid, as well as carrion and waste from ships. Males are known to aggressively defend their feeding grounds from females.

Song & Calls

The vocalizations of the Southern Giant Petrel are less documented in this account, but like many seabirds, they are likely to have a repertoire suited to their isolated breeding sites and life on the open ocean.

Breeding

Reaching sexual maturity around six to seven years of age, these birds nest in loose colonies, with larger aggregations in the Falkland Islands. They lay a single white egg in a nest made of vegetation and stones. Both parents share incubation duties over a period of 55–66 days, and the chick, once hatched, is brooded for two to three weeks, fledging after 104–132 days.

Similar Species

The Northern Giant Petrel is similar in appearance but can be differentiated by the reddish tip on its bill, compared to the greenish tip of the Southern Giant Petrel.

Diet and Feeding

The Southern Giant Petrel's diet is varied, including live prey such as fish and squid, as well as scavenged food like carrion and offal. It is also known to follow ships for scraps and has been observed killing other seabirds, including penguins and albatrosses.

Conservation status

The IUCN lists the Southern Giant Petrel as Least Concern, with a population trend that has seen both decreases and increases in different regions. Conservation efforts include monitoring and protection of breeding sites, as well as measures to mitigate threats from longline and trawl fishing.

App logo
Birda is a birdwatching app and community aimed at curious people who want to deepen their connection with nature.

Southern Giant Petrels on Birda

Photos
Sightings
Birda Logo

Your birdwatching journey like never before

Connect with nature in minutes
Take a walk, look out of the window and log the birds that you see. Feel good about those little connections to nature.
Discover the joy of birding
Find new birding spots, see more birds, share and celebrate with a like-minded community of nature lovers.
Play your part in saving nature
Logging your birding sightings and sessions turns into positive action for our planet. Every sighting counts.

Birda Blog

What Our Birders Say
778
Great bird recording
For a while I’ve been trying to find an app to easily record bird lists and day out and struggled to find one that I like. Birda is great for this, straightforward and a great community!
Chudbond
Love Birda
I love this app. It really encourages you to log your sightings and the community is friendly and helpful.
Bryan C
Clean and easy to use
Really enjoying this app, it's clean and easy to use. I love the ease of being able to add those one-off birds without starting a whole checklist. I also like the social aspect, like the parts of my Facebook I like, without the ads and junk, just birds. Can't wait to see it become more populated.
Paul F
Very good database
Highly recommend. It great that this app shows you male Vs female variations when posting. Very good database I'm really impressed.
JCBirding
Just what birding needs
We need more fun in birding, for years it has had a reputation for being up tight and stuffy and only perused by retirees and anoraks. Birda helps change that perception and firmly brings birding into the 21st century! Fun, interactive while still contributing to science and conservation. If you aren’t on it, why not??
Anonymous
The best bird logging app
Birda is honestly the best bird logging app I have seen. I love all the features it has from being able to do a session and log all the birds you see in one sitting, to being able to connect with other birders from all over the globe!
Leonie
We've been waiting for an App like this
Excellent! We've been waiting for an app like this! Thank you! It would be nice if you could assign additional birds to sessions later!
Trevarthen1
Birda fan
I really enjoy using Birda, all sightings are recorded and photos can be added. There are monthly challenges which help to get you out to record your sightings. The Birda community are great and are happy to help with unidentified bird sightings. Suitable for all ages and experience!
Hip An
Fantastic
Really enjoying Birda where I live i have a lot of Red kites really hard to photograph but I can video are you planning some place on the app where us Birda can post vids🦉🦅
Madstherangers
A mordern game changer
Birda is an awesome app, its updated the world of birding to the modern day with a fun and easy to use app. It’s engaging and allows positive interaction with fellow bird lovers!
As featured in
Birda Logo
AboutPressAmbassadorsAffiliatesInfluencersCareersPrivacyTerms & Conditions
An app for birdwatchers
Connect with us
Copyright © 2024 Chirp Birding. All rights reserved.