ACAP Latest News

Read about recent developments and findings in procellariiform science and conservation relevant to the Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels in ACAP Latest News.

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UPDATED. Historic film of a Northern Royal Albatross brooding its chick by seabird pioneer Lance Richdale can now be viewed online

Lancelot Richdale was a pioneer marine ornithologist in New Zealand, who studied (and published on) both penguins and procellariiform seabirds.  In his most readable biography by Neville Peat it is described how in 1936 he followed up a report of albatrosses at the tip of the Otago Peninsula, near Dunedin on New Zealand’s South Island.  He travelled out on his motorbike and walked to the headland.  He later wrote: "... there on a grassy path, before my astonished gaze, sat a male Albatross incubating a large white egg".

Lancelot Eric Richdale, OBE, DSc (University of New Zealand), 4 January 1900 - 19 December 1983

Two 1949/50 publications by Lance Richdale: valued parts of the ACAP Information Officer's personal library on procellariiform seabirds

Historical footage taken by Richdale of one of the first successful nests at Taiaroa Head archived in the University of Otago Library’s Hocken Collections can now be viewed online.  The two-and-a-half-minute film taken in 1939, silent and in black and white, first shows Richdale’s wife, Agnes visiting the nest containing a small downy chick being brooded by a leg-banded parent.  Lance Richdale is then shown weighing the chick in a cloth bag.  The short film ends with a later shot of the growing but still downy chick and a passing ship in the background below the head.

Photograph from The Royal Albatross Centre

Since his discovery, and subsequent devoted care of this  first successful breeding attempt, the colony of globally Endangered Northern Royal Albatrosses Diomedea sanfordi at Taiaroa Head has grown to around 50 well-protected pairs breeding each year (click here).  The colony must be the most visited group of albatrosses anywhere with close-up views to be made from a glassed observatory – and even closer views online via a 24-hour live-streaming ‘Royal Cam’ that has been set up close to an occupied nest each breeding season since 2015.

 

Richdale's legacy: the 500th Northern Royal Albatross chick to be reared at Taiaroa Head, photograph by Lyndon Perriman

Watch a 2016 video of albatross monitoring activities at Taiaroa Head with then on-site DOC Ranger, Lyndon Perriman.

Still keen to watch videos of albatrosses at Taiaroa Head?  Then try these links as well:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0sTS2An_dQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJtqvTxMQNE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8I8vCfgmIc

Reference:

Peat, N. 2011Seabird Genius.  The story of L.E. Richdale, the Royal Albatross, and the Yellow-eyed Penguin.  Dunedin: Otago University Press.  288 pp.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 30 January 2019, updated 01 February 2019

The Fifth World Seabird Twitter Conference is to take place this April

The Fifth World Seabird Twitter Conference (#WSTC5) will take place over 9-11 April.

“This is a great opportunity to get your seabird research or conservation work out to a wide audience, cost- and carbon-free.”

The first twitter conference for seabirds took place in 2015 (click here).

During the conference, each presenter will be given 15 minutes in which to send four tweets (each of 280 characters) about their topic. By following the hashtag specific to the conference (#WSTC5) the tweets can then be seen by people from all over the world.

“The first four years of the World Seabird Twitter Conference were a great success. For example, during just the three days of last year’s conference, the #WSTC4 hashtag was used 2,667 times by 601 contributors – reaching 1.2 million people. We had 100 presenters from over 20 countries – making it a truly global event.”

Abstract submission is now open and closes on 15 February.

For more information and to submit your abstract click here.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 29 January 2019

Foraging habits of Hawaiian pelagic seabirds reveal trophic changes over a century

Kaycee Morra (Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA) and colleagues have published in the journal Oecologia on trophic declines affecting Hawaiian albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters.

The paper’s abstract follows:

“We investigated how foraging habits vary among three ecologically distinct wide-ranging seabirds. Using amino acid δ15N proxies for nutrient regime (δ15NPhe) and trophic position (Δδ15NGlu-Phe), we compared Newell’s shearwater (Puffinus newelli) and Laysan albatross (Phoebastria immutabilis) foraging habits over the past 50–100 years, respectively, to published records for the Hawaiian petrel (Pterodroma sandwichensis). Standard ellipses constructed from the isotope proxies show that inter-population and interspecific foraging segregation have persisted for several decades. We found no evidence of a shift in nutrient regime at the base of the food web for the three species. However, our data identify a trophic decline during the past century for Newell’s shearwater and Laysan albatross (probability ≥ 0.97), echoing a similar decline observed in the Hawaiian petrel. During this time, Newell’s shearwaters and Hawaiian petrels have experienced population declines and Laysan albatross has experienced range extension and apparent population stability. Counting other recent studies, a pattern of trophic decline over the past century has now been identified in eight species of pelagic seabirds that breed in the Hawaiian Islands. Because our study species forage broadly across the North Pacific Ocean and differ in morphological and behavioral traits and feeding methods, the identified trophic declines suggest a pervasive shift in food web architecture within the past century.”

 

Laysan Albatrosses in flight, photograph by Peter Leary

Reference:

Morra, K.E., Chikaraishi, Y., Gandhi, H., James, H.J., Rossman, S., Wiley, A.E., Raine, A.F., Beck, J. & Ostrom, P.H. 2019.  Trophic declines and decadal-scale foraging segregation in three pelagic seabirds.  Oecologia  doi.org/10.1007/s00442-018-04330-8.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 28 January 2019

Bradnee Chambers, Executive Secretary, Convention on Migratory Species passes away at 52

The Convention on Migratory Species (Bonn Convention; UNEP-CMS) has announced that its Executive Secretary, Dr. Bradnee Chambers passed away on 23 January 2019 in his native Canada after a short illness.  Dr Chambers, an expert in international environmental governance who had been in the position since 2013, was only 52.

Tilman Schneider, CMS Associate Programme Officer, Avian Species has written to ACAP Latest News saying that the passing of the Executive Secretary has come as a shock.  The CMS Secretariat has stated “We have lost a great colleague, and a strong leader, who had a clear vision; a kind and cheerful manager who always kept his door open to all staff; and a generous and warm-hearted colleague.  He will be missed by many colleagues here in Bonn and around the world.”

 

Bradnee Chambers, MA, LLM, PhD (19 July 1966 - 23 January 2019), photograph by Aydin Bahramlouian

ACAP, one of seven “daughter” Agreements of the CMS Family, joins with its colleagues in Bonn in extending its thoughts and condolences to Bradnee Chambers’ family (he is survived by a daughter) and also to our CMS friends.

Those involved with the development of the Albatross & Petrel Agreement worked closely with the framework Bonn Convention, and with a previous CMS Executive Secretary, Arnulf Müller-Helmbrecht, around the time of the final negotiation meeting held in Cape Town, South Africa in 2001.  The early history of ACAP has been set out in a publication written by a number of persons then involved that inter alia details the important role played by the Bonn Convention in ACAP's genesis.

With thanks to Tilman Schneider, Associate Programme Officer, Avian Species, Convention on Migratory Species.

Reference:

Cooper, J., Baker, G.B., Double, M.C., Gales, R., Papworth, W., Tasker, M.L. & Waugh, S.M. 2006.  The Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels: rationale, history, progress and the way forward.  Marine Ornithology 34: 1-5.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 25 January 2019

Poems and paintings in the service of albatross conservation: a collaboration between Hannah Fries and Sara Parrilli

From time to time, ACAP Latest News has featured the role of albatrosses and petrels in literature and in the visual and aural arts.  Visual art works covered have included public statues around the world, as well as oil and water-colour paintings (often appearing on postage stamps).  Musical arts have been covered with Fleetwood Mac’s haunting guitar instrumental Albatross.  Albatrosses, more than petrels, have appeared in some well-known poems by such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Pablo Neruda and Charles Baudelaire.  Albatross poems featured in ALN have appeared in several languages: English, French and Spanish – coincidentally ACAP’s three official languages – as well as in Hawaiian.

ALN’s thinking is that artistic endeavours of these types can often strike a chord with the general public for a conservation cause more easily than can dry scientific writing - appealing to the heart as well as to the head.

Pleasing then to be able to get in touch with two USA-based artists, poet Hannah Fries and painter Sara Parrilli, who have collaborated on a suite of illustrated poems that address the plight of albatrosses in the North Pacific.  They write on-line:

“This collaboration began with a film clip: a trailer for the forthcoming film Albatross (now available to the public in its finished form), written and directed by artist Chris Jordan.  It is one of those works of art that combines so much grief with so much beauty that looking away from it feels impossible.  In this case, the story is about a remote island in the Pacific, the beautiful Laysan albatross, and the horrifying effects of the plastic that makes its way to the ocean and, carried by currents, gathers in a mind-bogglingly vast garbage patch.”

Here is just one of the collaborations from their Albatross project:

Albatross at the Great Pacific Garbage Patch - by Hannah Fries

Because hunger
Because life
Because squid and bottle caps and bags
Because pervasive
Because what is not needed passes through
Because salt our companion
Because solitude
Because the egg cracks open the chick cries out a thousand miles away
Because our ancestors
Because the wind that brings us
Because glide
Because dive
Because when has anything not been food to someone
Because now
Because here
Because the sea is our body is the world inside us
Because how will we recognize the end

Albatross at the Great Pacific Garbage Patch by Sara Parrilli

See more works from their project here.  Future postings will feature more of Hannah’s and Sara’s collaboration.

With thanks to Hannah Fries and Sara Parrilli.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 24 January 2019

The Agreement on the
Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels

ACAP is a multilateral agreement which seeks to conserve listed albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters by coordinating international activity to mitigate known threats to their populations.

About ACAP

ACAP Secretariat

119 Macquarie St
Hobart TAS 7000
Australia

Email: secretariat@acap.aq
Tel: +61 3 6165 6674