The Manx shearwater is entirely marine, typically flying within of the sea surface. It nests in burrows on small islands, which it visits only at night. Its nesting colonies are in the north
Atlantic Ocean in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Iceland, the
Faroe Islands, France, the Isle of Man, the
Channel Islands, the
Azores,
Canary Islands, and
Madeira. The most important colonies, with a total of more than 300,000 pairs, are on islands off Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Three-quarters of the British and Irish birds breed on just three islands;
Skomer,
Skokholm, and
Rùm. Around 7000–9000 pairs breed in Iceland, with at least 15,000 pairs on the Faeroes. Other populations are of at most a few hundred pairs. The northeast of North America has recently been colonised from
Newfoundland and Labrador to
Massachusetts; although breeding was first recorded in 1973, populations remain small. Records in the northeast
Pacific are increasing, and breeding has been suspected in
British Columbia and
Alaska. During the breeding-season birds regularly commute between their colonies and offshore feeding grounds that can be up to 1,500 km away. For example, adult Manx shearwaters rearing their chick on the west coast of
Ireland have been observed to travel all the way to the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge to feed when the conditions are right. Juvenile birds undertake their first migration without their parents. Only a few days after leaving the nest, these birds can already travel up to 2000 km. The journey south can be over , so a 50-year-old bird has probably covered over a million km (600,000 mi) on migration alone. The migration also appears to be quite complex, containing many stopovers and foraging zones throughout the Atlantic Ocean. Ornithologist
Chris Mead estimated that a bird ringed in 1957 when aged about 5 years and still breeding on
Bardsey Island off
Wales in April 2002 had flown over 8 million km (5 million mi) in total during its 50-year life. Manx shearwaters are able to fly directly back to their burrows when released hundreds of kilometres away, even inland. ==Behaviour==