On Torishima Island in the Izu Islands, about 580 km south of Tokyo, the research team attached GPS-loggers (which record the location at 2-minute intervals) and video-loggers (which record 3-second videos at 2-minute intervals during
daylight hours) onto black-footed albatrosses, Phoebastria nigripes, while they ware breeding (Fig. 1). We collected and analyzed location information and 8,492 video data from 13 birds. As a result, a total of 16 pieces of marine debris, including
styrofoam and fishing gear floating on the sea surface, were filmed by nine of the birds (Fig. 2). While they sometimes passed over the debris (Fig. 2a), they sometimes landed near it, and one of them was shown actually pecking at a red and white plastic
sheet with its beak (Fig. 2f). They were also recorded foraging for natural food (squids and fishes) (Fig. 3).