Three healthy Northern Gannet chicks hatched at Zoo am Meer Bremerhaven on the Northern coast of Germany,
on May 21 and on June 5
and 18. In the early 1980s, Zoo am Meer
was the first zoo to
successfully breed Northern Gannets in captivity. Up
until today, Bremerhaven has remained one of very
few European zoos to have successful hatchings of Northern Gannet chicks almost
every year.

Photo credits: Joachim Schoene / Zoo Am Meer Bremerhaven
According
to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s (IUCN) Red List of Threatened
Species, the bird is listed as a species of Least Concern. Found along both sides of the Atlantic
Ocean, Northern Gannets are a common bird with an uncommon ability: with an
adult wingspan measuring nearly six feet (175 cm), these marine birds catch
shoaling fish by nose-diving from heights of up to 130 feet (40 m). In the
wild they are colonial, making nests of grasses and seaweed on coastal ledges
and hilltops. Colonies breed in northern France, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Iceland, Norway, and the eastern tip of Quebec. Pairs
produce a single egg in the month of May, which is brooded with the feet for
about 45 days. After five years, young Northern Gannets develop the elegant
white and black plumage of mature adults.




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