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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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Albatross Task Force highlights its successes reducing bycatch

BirdLife International’s Albatross Task Force (ATF) has released its latest annual progress report- covering highlights of the ATF’s activities in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Namibia and South Africa, covering the period April 2017 to March 2018.

A summary circulated by the ATF follows:

“Last year culminated in all of our teams getting together for a workshop in Mar del Plata, Argentina, to share expertise in how to ensure the bycatch regulations we’ve fought so hard for actually work to save vulnerable seabirds. Argentina was the perfect location for these discussions, as in May, regulations requiring trawlers to use bird-scaring lines there came into force. The team have spent the past year working with industry to prepare them for these new rules by supplying bird-scaring lines to over half the fleet, and are now closely watching to see how effective the measures will be in reducing bycatch. In the coming year, we hope to demonstrate that similar regulations in Namibia have resulted in a major reduction since they came into force in 2015.

Twin bird-scaring lines keep Black-browed Albatrosses away from the warp cables behind a South African demersal hake trawler, photograph by Barry Watkins

In Chile, our new “seabird-safe” purse-seine nets - which can reduce seabird bycatch by 98% - were nominated for the Latin American Green Awards 2018, and our collaborative work with this fleet has resulted in excellent relations with national artisanal fishers’ confederation. The Brazilian team have worked closely with the authorities to ensure that seabird bycatch issues are well understood and that regulations are enforced in ports. In South Africa, our longest-standing ATF team, the demersal trawl fleet has maintained its clean slate of no birds caught – and the team stepped up engagement with two longline fleets to look at specially adapted bird-scaring lines for smaller vessels.

These achievements have been made possible due to the collaborative efforts between our in country partners, the RSPB and BirdLife International – as well as funding from the RSPB membership, external donors and generous individual donations. We are extremely thankful for the continued support we receive from you, without which we wouldn’t be able to keep up the fight to save the albatross.”

Click here to read more and to access the ATF annual review.

Additionally, Projeto Albatroz, a NGO that represents the Albatross Task Force in Brazil, has released its own annual report, written in Portuguese and entitled Amar o Mar for the period July 2017 to July 2018.  The document covers activities by the NGO in the fields of research, public policies, environmental education and communication.  Access it here.

With thanks to Nina da Rocha, Albatross Task Force Project Officer

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 24 September 2018

Lego Wanderer

“Master Logray” (a pseudonym) has designed and built a model of a globally Vulnerable Wandering Albatross Diomedea exulans in a flying position with outspread jointed wings and a hinged bill out of LEGO blocks.

 

The model has been submitted to the LEGO Ideas website in the hope of gaining enough online support so that it might be made commercially available as a set for purchase and building by enthusiasts (see here).

Read more here on the albatross build.

How did LEGO get started?  View a video to find out.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 21 September 2018

UPDATED Translocation of Endangered Newell's Shearwaters on Kauai: third year underway

Kauai Endangered Seabird Recovery Project (KESRP) teams were flown by Airborne Aviation helicopter into the mountains of the Hawaiian island of Kauai on two separate days earlier this month to collect globally Endangered Newell's Shearwater Puffinus newelli chicks from their burrows.  Seventeen birds were moved from the Upper Limahuli Preserve and Hono O Nā Pali Natural Area Reserve to the Nihoku Ecosystem Restoration Project’s predator-proof site near the island’s coastline within the Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge. A further two chicks were transferred from within the refuge itself to the fenced site. The 19 chicks, currently weighing between 400 - 500 g, are now being fed by hand on "a delicious slurry of squid, fish, oil, pedialyte and vitamins"  prepared daily by the environmental NGO Pacific Rim Conservation until they fledge from their custom-designed artificial burrows.   Watch short videos of the operation here and here.

Collection of Newell's Shearwater chicks was facilitated by use of a helicopter, photographs by André Raine

The previous season’s translocation efforts with Newell’s Shearwaters, the second for the species, hand-reared 18 translocated chicks at the Nihoku translocation site; in the first year in 2016 eight chicks were translocated in what is planned to be a five-year project.

"Newell’s shearwaters are likely to start returning to breeding colonies at 2 or 3 years of age, according to KESRP, but likely do not breed until they’re 5 or 6."

Read more here.

The translocation project (which includes globally Vulnerable Hawaiian Petrels Pterodroma sandwichensis) is a multi-partner project with the Kauai Endangered Seabird Recovery Project, Pacific Rim Conservation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, American Bird Conservancy, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources, Pacific Studies Co-operative Unit and the National Tropical Botanical Garden.

With thanks to André Raine.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 20 September 2018, updated with corrections on 01 October 2018

Henri Weimerskirch, doyen French marine ornithologist, talks of his 2018 albatross research

Henri Weimerskirch (Responsable de l’Équipe “Écologie des Oiseaux et Mammifères Marins” au laboratoire du CNRS de Chizé) retourne cette année à Kerguelen. Dans cette vidéo, il nous présente les projets qu'il mettra en œuvre cette année.

Un Programme coordonné et financé pat l'Institut Polaire français (IPEV n 109).

 

Henri Weimerskirch

Translation:

Henri Weimerskirch (Team Leader "Ecology of Birds and Marine Mammals" at the CNRS Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé) returns this year to Kerguelen. In this video, he presents the projects he will implement this year. 

A programme coordinated and funded by the French Polar Institute (IPEV No. 109).

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 19 September 2018

Spring bells ring to welcome Northern Royal Albatrosses back to Taiaroa Head

Dunedin’s bells rang today to mark the first globally Endangered Northern Royal Albatross Diomedea sanfordi to return for the spring breeding season at Taiaroa Head, New Zealand’s only mainland albatross colony (click here).

“As well as the traditional bells a “Welcome back” flag will fly outside the Mayors’ office and fans are setting bell chimes on their mobile phones to ring at 1 pm. Dunedin hosts the world’s only mainland Royal Albatross breeding colony which is a source of great pride and a symbol of the city – the Wildlife Capital of New Zealand”.

Because the Northern Royal Albatross has a long breeding season, overlap occurs with six of 13 chicks of the 2016/17 season still present, seven having fledged in the last few days. The first returning adult recorded for the 2018/19 breeding season is an 11-year old female LKW (colour banded Lime Black White) which arrived  two days ago on 16 September (read detailed account and see more photos of her arrival here).

Northern Royal Albatross LKW soon after touch down on Sunday; the bird behind is a 2017/18 chick soon to fledge

Photograph by Sharyn Broni, courtesy of the Royal Albatross Centre

“A bumper season is expected in 2018/19 as there were many failed nests due to extreme weather in 17/18.  September is an exciting time of year for us as we say farewell to the fledging chicks as they take their first flight out to sea and also welcome back the returning birds for the upcoming breeding season. There is always a bit of anticipation to see who is the first to return, who returns to breed, will there be any first time breeders and most exciting is finding out who returns for the first time since fledging many years prior.”

In 2018 the colony celebrates 80 years since the first albatross chick fledged on 22 September 1938.  In the 2017/18 season 148 colour-banded birds returned out of a total population of over 250, five as first time returners.  Eggs laid were 33, resulting in only 13 chicks being reared from 16 hatchlings – ascribed to an unusually hot summer, which put the birds under a great deal of stress.

In the 2016/17 season 151 albatrosses returned, a record 17 for the first time. There were 36 nests with eggs and 25 chicks hatched with 23 chicks fledging.

Information from the Royal Albatross Centre Facebook page.

Click here to access the “Royal cam” - a 24-hour live stream of an albatross nest at Taiaroa Head during the breeding season.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 18 September 2018

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.

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