Northern Gannets

A Pair of Northern Gannets exchange nesting material at the Bonaventure Island Gannetry during my Gannets Galore workshop. This pair had built a nest on a rock, and the vegetation kept getting blown away; perhaps next year, they will return and make a mud bowl nest like all other Gannet pairs.

Northern Gannets Nest Building (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens & Sony 1.4X Tele-extender @840mm. ISO 250, f/7.1 @ 1/1,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Northern Gannet Landing with Seaweed in a foggy Gannetry

A Northern Gannet lands directly in front of me with a fresh load of seaweed on a windy and foggy morning during my Gannets Galore Workshop in Quebec. Because it is so easy for the huge Gannets to lift off in high winds, the sky fills with circling birds calling their mates (they recognize their mates by sound); The sky full of tens of thousands of Northern Gannets swirling around you is one of the greatest wonders to witness!

Northern Gannet Landing with Seaweed in a foggy Gannetry (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens & Sony 1.4X Tele-extender @840mm. ISO 1,600, f/5.6 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full-frame image.

Northern Gannet Portrait showing off nasofrontal hinge

A Northern Gannet poses during my Gannets Galore Workshop for a portrait with its mouth wide open, showing off its nasofrontal hinge.

That’s not an accidental break in its beak! At the base of the upper mandible, a thin sheet of nasal bone is attached to the skull at the nasofrontal hinge, which gives mobility to the upper mandible, allowing it to move upward and downward.

Northern Gannet Portrait showing nasofrontal hinge (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA). Image made during my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @598mm. ISO 400, f/14 @ 1/400s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Northern Gannets Nest Building

This pair of Northern Gannets attempted to build their nest with fresh vegetation on a rock, but it kept getting blown away. This image was made the only time I saw the birds pointed toward me during the six days I was there for my Gannets Galore and so much more workshops; it lasted only a fraction of a second…

Northern Gannets Nest Building (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens & Sony 1.4X Tele-extender @840mm. ISO 320, f/8 @ 1/80s Manual exposure. Almost full frame image (slightly cropped top to 4 x 5 aspect ratio).

Northern Gannets Lovers

Sitting quietly and observing a colony of Northern Gannets interact is a magical gift. On a foggy morning in a sea of white, I picked out this loving couple with my telephoto lens, gently greeting one another after the closest bird returned from a fishing trip at sea. These beautiful birds pair for life (with frequent “out-of-nest” encounters - smile). Each season, they travel hundreds of miles to come together like long-lost lovers, to rekindle their commitment to one another before nesting. This was photographed in Eastern Quebec during my recent Gannets Galore and so much more workshops. I have pre-visualized this image for over a decade and come close several times, but the isolated subjects, eye contact and ethereal, diffused, low-contrast light make this one special for me; a favourite from the trip!

Northern Gannets Fencing (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens & Sony 1.4X Tele-extender @840mm. ISO 1,250, f/6.3 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Northern Gannet Landing with Seaweed Vertical Cover

On June 2, the first day of my first Gannets Galore and so much more workshop, I photographed this Northern Gannet landing with seaweed with my Sony a9 III and Sony 600/4 turned vertically. The lifting fog and slight cloud made for some beautiful diffused light and saturated colours - smile.

Northern Gannet Landing with Seaweed Vertical (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens @600mm. ISO 1,000, f/4 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Photographed with the camera turned vertically, this is just about a full-frame image: cropped top & bottom to 4 X 5 aspect ratio.

Northern Gannet returning to mate with seaweed

Another Gannet image from my recent Gannets Galore and so much more workshops in Quebec. I photographed this frame of a special seaweed delivery by a Northern Gannet to its waiting partner with the Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera and Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @268mm.

Northern Gannet returning to mate with seaweed (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA). Image made on the afternoon of June 7, 2024 during my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @268mm. ISO 500, f/6.3 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Northern Gannet Landing with Seaweed

This is one of the last images that I made on the last day of the second Gannets Galore and so much more workshops (June 7, 2024) as I was saying goodbye to the colony for another year. It is a great image to demonstrate just how perfect the Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens is, especially when paired with the Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera. I was capturing 120 images per second at 318mm as I zoomed out while the Gannet flew towards me.

Northern Gannet landing with seaweed (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA). Image made on the afternoon of June 7, 2024 during my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @318mm. ISO 800, f/6.3 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Black-eyed birds: Northern Gannets with black eyes believed to be survivors of High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza virus (HPAIV) H5N1

Here is an image of a pair of Northern Gannets fencing made during my Gannets Galore and so much more workshop on Bonaventure Island in Quebec.

I worked hard to find a pair of Northern Gannets that clearly showed the difference between a normal eye and the eye of an Avian Flu survivor with an entirely black iris. I pre-visualized an image of a mated pair of fencing Gannets(see my last post HERE) like this: I wasn’t at all convinced that I would succeed because of the likelihood that both mates could have survived infection and developed the same black irises, or, worse yet, there wouldn't be any pairs with one of each eye colour.

What we know:

Shortly after Northern Gannets tested positive for High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza virus (HPAIV) H5N1, researchers started seeing Gannets with unusual iris colouring, ranging from mottled to entirely black. Gannets typically have piercing pale blue/grey eyes, so the black eyes were conspicuous and something no one had seen before. The combination of birds with black eyes being seen for the first time during the first known outbreak of HPAIV led researchers to suspect that the colouring of the black iris was linked to infection.

At the Scottish Bass Rock Northern Gannetry, Seventy-eight percent of the black-eyed birds tested had antibodies to H5N1, proving that the development was likely a direct consequence of a previous HPAI infection. Read a great article by Jude Lane of the UK Marine Conservation Science Team, RSPB, at the British Ornithologists’ Union Blog HERE.

Teams from Environment and Climate Change Canada and the Université du Québec à Rimouski are continuing to study the effects of avian flu on the Northern Gannets at the Bonaventure Island colony in Québec, and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds are studying the effects at the Bass Rock colony in Scotland.

Northern Gannets Fencing. Avian flu black iris comparison to normal iris (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @600mm. ISO 1,000, f/6.3 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure.

Northern Gannets Lovebirds

A pair of Northern Gannets “fencing” during my Gannets Galore and so much more workshops in Quebec. After one mate returns to the nest (in this case, the super clean one on the right), Gannets greet each other by facing each other, often touching, calling, and shaking heads side to side as their bills clack together (fencing; think sword-fighting a la “on guard”), bowing, and finally preening each other’s necks.

While I often strive to isolate the subject using a longer focal length, I chose not to increase my reach by switching to the 2X tele-extender after realizing that I love the added interest of the second, out-of-focus pair of Gannets in the lower right-hand corner.

Northern Gannets Fencing (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 600mm f/4 G Master OSS Lens & Sony 1.4X Tele-extender @840mm. ISO 1,250, f/5.6 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.

Northern Gannet with Seaweed and Gannets Galore Workshop on Bonaventure Island Announced

A Northern Gannet flying over the Northern Gannet Colony on Bonaventure Island with seaweed during my Gannets Galore Workshop in Quebec, Canada.

I am on my way home from hosting two back-to-back awesome groups of photographers during my Gannets Galore Workshops on Bonaventure Island in Quebec. We had a fair mix of weather and enjoyed incredible photographic experiences during the early morning Zodiac adventures underneath the bird-filled cliffs and while at the gannetry. Everyone was amazed by the sheer volume of birds circling and swirling around the Zodiac: Common Murres, Razorbills, Black-legged Kittiwakes, Black Guillemots, Harlequin Ducks, Common Eiders and, of course, the most beautiful Northern Gannets!

June 5-7, 2025 Gannets Galore and so much more workshop is now live HERE: https://www.chrisdoddsphoto.com/gannets-galore-photo-tour-workshop

Northern Gannet in flight with seaweed (Morus bassanus, Fou de Bassan, NOGA) from my GANNETS GALORE WORKSHOP at Bonaventure Island, Quebec, Canada ©Christopher Dodds All Rights Reserved. Sony Alpha a9 III Mirrorless camera & Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS Lens @374mm. ISO 640, f/6.3 @ 1/5,000s Manual exposure. Full frame image.