'From the Eye of the Albatrosses: A Bird-Borne Camera Shows an Association between Albatrosses and a Killer Whale in the Southern Ocean':
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgc8jg4Aa5tYFq3sv1SIsh3r2W2GFymFNVJpT_YwPFlXmkwjRyoR1_vaqfWb7NTnj89_Ub48OliPyg9NjYh9CABPnwkqt_6cDeWZPXUqlefmMusLNr16JATUidzmRCHAgiK-Sn9LF2KUQJv/s400/journal.pone.0007322.g001.png)
The images from our albatross-borne camera show at least four albatrosses (including the camera-mounted bird) actively following a killer whale while it was breaking the sea surface. Only a few previous studies have documented the association between albatrosses and killer whales, and these were mostly in shallow waters...
Although it is still difficult to quantify how often black-browed albatrosses associate with killer whales in the open ocean, our results, together with ship-based observations..., suggest that these associations may occur more frequently than previously anticipated and may be a part of foraging repertoire of albatrosses.
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0007322
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