Kauai News

Experts Set Out to Create New Colony for Endangered Seabird on Small Island Off Kauaʻi

Play
Listen to this Article
3 minutes
Loading Audio... Article will play after ad...
Playing in :00
A
A
A

Last week, workers from the DLNR Division of Forestry and Wildlife, the Kaua‘i Endangered Seabird Recovery Project, and volunteers from Archipelago Research and Conservation took the first steps to create a new colony of Band-rumped Storm Petrels on Moku‘ae‘ae, a three-acre island off Kīlauea Point.

The species is listed as endangered both at the federal and state level. The work is intended to also enhance the colony of Bulwer’s Petrels, already breeding on the island.

On Friday, April 22, just up the road from the Kīlauea Point Lighthouse, workers loaded nest boxes for the birds into large canvass bags. Earlier a helicopter had dropped three people on the island, and then made five additional trips to sling-load supplies over. The boxes are set out as burrows, with the hope they will become nesting homes for two species of seabirds.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

“For these nest enhancing projects, we expect our actions will help increase breeding success for the species, increase their breeding ranges, and increase our own capacity to study these enigmatic species,” said Dilek Sahin, KESRP project coordinator.

The team set up 50 nest boxes and calling systems to try and attract the Band-rumped Storm Petrels. A new colony, created by this social attraction, will make research more accessible and management activities more effective. The boxes were built specifically to allow these small petrels in while keeping the larger Wedge-tailed Shearwaters out. Researchers say this will help reduce “inter-specific” competition, helping to increase nesting success for the target seabirds

Sheri S. Mann, the DOFAW Kaua‘i Branch Manager was one of the driving forces behind the Lehua Island Restoration Project. The much larger Lehua, like Moku‘ae‘ae, is also managed as a State Wildlife Sanctuary and is now free of rats which had a long history of devouring seabird eggs and chicks.

ADVERTISEMENT

“On Lehua we are now in the recovery and monitoring phase. Native seabirds have returned in larger numbers (compared to pre-rat eradication), and native plants are being allowed to grow without have rodents gnawing on them,” she said.

The grant supporting rare seabird and recovery on Moku‘ae‘ae is also covering additional work on Lehua, including placement of 30 nest boxes for Band-rumped Storm Petrels. On both islands, trail cameras will be used to monitor activity and to provide scientific data to maintain, protect, and facilitate seabird re-colonization of the islands.

Dr. André Raine, Science Director of ARC, did extensive work on Lehua and was on hand on Moku‘ae‘ae to accept sling-loads of burrow boxes and sandbags to hold them in place. The chopper lowered one load to where Raine was standing on a small spit of sand surrounded by rugged rocks…the preferred breeding habitat for Bulwer’s petrels, described as a secretive bird. It is hoped that the nest boxes deployed in these areas will provide additional protected nesting sites for the existing Bulwer’s Petrel colony.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

No rats have been detected on Moku‘ae‘ae, but barn owls have. Researchers find bird carcasses on every trip to the islet. An integral part of the project is controlling the invasive, non-native owls.

“With our sound system (social attraction), and safer burrows we want to create the impression that Band-rumped Storm Petrels are already nesting on Moku‘ae‘ae,” Sahin said. “We have created an attractive system for the birds and because these species have high apparent site-fidelity once they come to the island to nest, we’re hoping they’ll stick with their home site year after year.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsored Content

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Stay in-the-know with daily
headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Cancel
×

Comments

This comments section is a public community forum for the purpose of free expression. Although Kauai Now encourages respectful communication only, some content may be considered offensive. Please view at your own discretion. View Comments