![This undated photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows short...](https://www.odt.co.nz/sites/default/files/styles/odt_portrait_medium_3_4/public/story/2016/04/this_undated_photo_provided_by_the_national_oceani_4c8ff4c465.jpg?itok=buOj1gub)
This undated photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows short-tailed albatross on Torsishima Island, Japan. Photo from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/AP.
The American Bird Conservancy says the short-tailed albatross was killed in the Bering Sea. Federal officials say the death of the seven and a half-year-old bird is the first such by a US commercial fishing vessel since 1998.
The short-tailed albatross was once thought to be extinct but now numbers a few thousand. The dead animal had a metal leg band identifying it was from Torishima Island in Japan, where the majority of short-tailed albatross breed.
A federal programme has helped greatly reduce the number of albatross deaths caused by commercial fishing. The problem is known as by-catch, or the unintended capture of a non-targeted species.