Waved Albatross was created in 1883.
An albatross mainly eats squid and fish, either by surface feeding or diving.
it eats fish and squid
A carnivore because an albatros eats fish and a meat eater is known as a carnivore
Galapagos tortoise, marine turtle, marine and land iguanas, lava lizards, cormorant, waved albatross, boobies, frigatebird.
Albatrosses are _not_ limited to the Southern Hemisphere, but it is an interesting question nonetheless. Maybe it depends on what you mean by "albatross." In the albatross family, there are many species, some of which do live in the northern hemisphere. Three live in the North Pacific, and one lives in the Galapagos Islands which, being right on the equator, are technically partly in the Northern Hemisphere. There are no albatrosses in the North Atlantic. Except for the waved albatross in the Galapagos Islands, albatrosses do not live in the tropics. This is because they need wind in order to fly long distances, and there are often long periods of calm in the tropics. Therefore, those albatrosses that live in the Southern Hemisphere can not cross to the Northern Hemisphere, and vice versa. The waved albatross is able to live in the Galapagos because the local conditions there create enough wind for them. For more details, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albatross.
The present perfect tense of waved is:I/You/We/They have waved.He/She/It has waved.
A homophone for "wavied" is "waved."
There is not a book titled The Albatross. There is however, Albatross by Jossie Bloss, The Last Albatross by Ian Irvine and Eye Of The Albatross by Carl Safina.
Waved Out was created on 1998-06-23.
The largest seabird in the world is the Albatross.
There are Seven species of seabird that are native to the Galapagos Islands, they are as follows, Galapagos Penguin Waved Albatross Flightless Cormorant Swallow-tailed Gull Lava or dusky Gull Nazca Booby Galapagos Shearwater.