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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.

THE ACAP MONTHLY MISSIVE. Copy cat or copy mouse? A Sponsor a Hectare scheme is proposed for New Zealand's Auckland Island

UPDATE A feral cat feeds on the body of a White capped Albatross chick close to fledging Auckland Island photograph by Stephen Bradley 
A feral cat feeds on the carcass of a White-capped Albatross Thalassarche steadi on Auckland Island, August 2019; photograph by Stephen Bradley, Department of Conservation o Te Papa Atawhai (read more here)

A fund-raising campaign for the Maukahuka Restoration Project has been launched in new Zealand that aims to make sub-Antarctic Auckland Island free of its estimated 1500 feral pigs, 550-690 feral cats and an unknown number of House Mice.  The launch took place on 03 November aboard the Heritage Adventurer of Heritage Expeditions in the city of Auckland's waterfront.  The restoration project, set to cost NZ$ 80 million, is a partnership between New Zealand’s Department of Conservation (DOC) as the operational lead, indigenous tribe Ngāi Tahu’s Murihiku Regeneration, Island Conservation (providing technical advice), New Zealand Nature Fund (NZNF) as the fund-raising partner and Heritage Expeditions (which has spent more than 35 years leading scientific and eco-tourism voyages to New Zealand’s subantarctic islands).

At the ship-based launch Lou Sanson, a NZNF Trustee and a former DOC Director-General, proposed that a scheme be instituted whereby project supporters could “purchase” a symbolic hectare of the 46 000-ha island for NZ$1000, with the aim to raise as much as NZ$44 million.  “Under the plan, donors would receive a certificate recognising their “ownership” of a hectare of Auckland Island, without any legal title.”

Auckland Island pig 2 Pete McClelland
A feral pig on Aukland Island approaches a breeding White-capped Albatross
Thalassarche steadi, photograph by Pete McClelland

In a recorded message played at the Auckland Island event, the New Zealand Conservation Minister Tama Potaka said the islands are “among the great wildlife sanctuaries of the Southern Hemisphere.  The challenge before us is to restore balance – to let these islands breathe again.  Projects like this show how government, iwi [Māori tribes], philanthropy and enterprise can work together for enduring results.”

Marion Island hectare map September 2025Marion Island’s “Sponsor a Hectare” scheme.  Each exposed rectangle represents 100 ha funded as at 04 November 2025

The Auckland Island crowd-funding proposal is remarkably similar to the “Sponsor a Hectare” initiative of the Saving Marion Island’s Seabirds: The Mouse-Free Marion (MFM) Project which aims to eradicate the albatross-killing House Mice on South Africa’s sub-Antarctic island.  This crowd-funding scheme is working to raise 30 million Rands at a cost of R1000 for each of the islands 30 000 hectares; it is currently standing at 42% of target.  It is important to note, that as for the Auckland Island proposal, the Marion Island crowd funder will only raise a part of the total funds required.

Sponsor a hectare planning
John Cooper (second left) proposes Marion Island’s “Sponsor a Hectare” scheme to BirdLife South Africa colleagues back in 2017 (read more here)

When I first proposed the Hectare a Sponsor idea to BirdLife South Africa (which jointly manages the MFM Project with the South African Government’s Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment) I had in mind the “Million Dollar Mouse” public campaign that with DOC and other support, funded the eradication of House Mice on New Zealand’s Antipodes Island.  I was particularly taken by the Antipodes Island map that showed progress with fund-raising by crossing out mice.

AntipodesX out that mouse! Progress with the Antipodes Island’s Million Dollar Mouse Project funding

The Auckland Islands are a nature reserve and part of the New Zealand Sub-Antarctic Islands World Heritage Site.  Removal of the remaining introduced mammals will mean that all the New Zealand’s sub-Antarctic islands will be free of mammalian pests, following successful campaigns on Enderby (cattle, rabbits, mice) Campbell (sheep, cats and rats) and Antipodes (mice).  Goats were previously eliminated from Auckland Island.

It seems that civil/government partnerships are the way forward to fund introduced mammal eradications on large islands - as exemplified by Antipodes, Auckland and Marion, as well as earlier on South Georgia (Islas Georgias del Sur)* where the Habitat Restoration Project rid the island of its rodents and the sadly failed attempt by the Gough Island Restoration Programme to eradicate that island’s mice.

Slowly but steadily the islands of the Southern Ocean are being rewilded by the eradication of their introduced pests, thus helping save their threatened albatrosses and petrels, and all their biota.  Wearing a different hat as News Correspondent for the Mouse-Free Marion Project, I am grateful that I can do my small part towards this worthy goal.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 12 November 2025

*A dispute exists between the Governments of Argentina and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (Islas Georgias del Sur y Islas Sandwich del Sur) and the surrounding maritime areas.

 

A project to replace the ground counting of albatrosses on Midway Atoll with drones receives matching funds

Drone Laysan Midway 1Drone image of Laysan Albatrosses on Midway Atoll during the 2024/25 breeding season

The Friends of Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge (FOMA) has received a US$50 000 grant from the Marisla Foundation for "Flying High for Conservation", the second year of a three-year effort to revolutionize seabird monitoring using drones on Midway Atoll.  The project, led by researchers Anna Vallery and Dan Link, aims to replace the annual ground-based censuses of Black-footed Phoebastria nigripes and Laysan P. immutabilis Albatrosses (over 600 000 occupied nests were counted last year) with more efficient, less disruptive drone technology.

FOMA is adding US$25 000 to the Marisla grant.  “We are asking you, our closest supporters, to help us raise the final funds needed. Every dollar you donate unlocks three more, helping us hit our uus$100 000 goal!”

The funds raised will also help support the Hatch Year 2026 Annual Counters.  The 2026 count is considered critical for the Refuge to get accurate figures for the two species of breeding albatrosses, and the drone research can only be ground-truthed if carried out concurrently.

Drone Midway 1“A drone image helps to refine sector boundaries on Midway Atoll”

Click here to become a FOMA member or to make a donation.

Read an earlier ACAP Latest News article on using drones in Midway.

Information and photographs from the FOMA Facebook page.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 11 November 2025

 

Egg laying has commenced for the 2025/26 breeding season of Northern Royal Albatrosses at Pukekura/Taiaroa Head

Northern Royal Albatross first egg 2025 26 Female LYL (Lime-Yellow-Lime) exposes her egg for the photographer, her new partner is behind, photograph from the Royal Albatross Centre

Egg laying has begun for Endangered Northern Royal Albatrosses Diomedea sanfordi in the mainland colony within the Pukekura/Taiaroa Head Nature Reserve, South Island, New Zealand, as reported on 06 November.

 “Northern Royal Albatross only lay one egg every two years, so the start of a new albatross generation is always a momentous occasion at Pukekura.  These hefty eggs will be laid over November and incubated for the next eighty days.  Albatross parents will work together to juggle incubation and foraging until their chicks are old enough to sit on the headland by themselves (approximately 5-6 weeks old).  These chicks will keep them working full-time all the way up to September when they finally fledge and leave the nest.”

“The Royal Cam will be moved after all eggs have been laid and a suitable Royal Cam family can be chosen. Cam pair location depends on being in range of the cable, the cam needs to be higher up from the nest and the pair needs to be a reliable and tolerant pair.”

Information from the Facebook groups Royal Albatross Centre and Royal Cam Albatross Group New Zealand.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 10 November 2025

 

A symposium at the Fourth World Seabird Conference in September 2026 will address seabird bycatch mitigation

WSC4 Landscape 

The Fourth World Seabird Conference (WSC4) will be held as a hybrid event in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia over 07-11 September 2026 with the overall theme “Wings of Adaptation: Seabirds in a Changing Climate”.

During the conference Richard Phillips (British Antarctic Survey, UK) and Johannes Fischer (Department of Conservation, Aotearoa New Zealand) will co-convene a symposium entitled Bridging the implementation gap between seabird and seabird-bycatch mitigation research and fisheries management.

The description for Symposium S05 follows:

“Bycatch in commercial fisheries is a major driver of seabird declines globally, particularly for albatrosses and petrels.  A substantial body of evidence is available highlighting seabird declines due to fisheries, underlying drivers and threats, and the effectiveness of bycatch mitigation, but this is rarely able to be resolved in a coordinated manner.  Despite the compelling conservation rationale, seabird-bycatch mitigation requirements around the world, particularly in Regional Fisheries Management Organisations, are yet to fully adopt the standards set out in the best-practice advice developed by the Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels (ACAP).  In addition, the burden of evidence imposed by fisheries managers before they are prepared to improve seabird-bycatch regulations appears be increasing.  To address the challenge of improving the conservation status of seabirds, especially for albatrosses and petrels, researchers need to better target their studies and outputs to drive real-world policy applications.  By 1) showcasing the weight of the current evidence, and 2) highlighting future research opportunities, this symposium seeks to achieve further coherence within the community and bridge the gap between research and fisheries management for seabird conservation.”

Bird Scaring line Domingo JimenezA bird scaring line in action, photograph by Domingo Jimenez

Other symposia and workshops of interest to ACAP include:

Symposium S02:  Seabird tracking data and novel tools to guide marine conservation areas in the High Seas

Conveners: Stephanie Borrelle (BirdLife International), Tammy Davies, (BirdLife International), Lindsay Young (National Geographic Pristine Seas)

Symposium S03-04:  Monitoring and management of High Pathogenicity Avian Influenza and other infectious diseases in seabirds

Conveners: Patricia Serafini (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil), Amandine Gamble (Cornell University, USA), Jana Jeglinski (Aarhus University, Denmark), Jude Lane (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, UK)

Symposium S07:  Antarctic seabirds in a rapidly changing climate

Conveners: Yuna Kim (BirdLife Australia), Julie McInnes (Australian Antarctic Division)

Symposium S14:  Global perspectives on seabird restoration

Conveners: Nick Holmes, Alex Wegmann, Juliet Lamb (The Nature Conservancy, USA); Chris Gaskin, Edin Whitehead (The Seabird Trust, Aotearoa NZ); Stephanie Borrelle, Steve Cranwell (BirdLife International)

Workshop W03:  Reducing seabird mortality from fisheries: case studies of the BirdLife partnership from Europe, South America and Southern Africa and how to merge forces globally to progress further

Conveners: Antonio Vulcano (BirdLife International, UK), Yann Rouxel (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, UK)

Read the descriptions for these and the other symposia and workshops here.

WSC4 is now open for early bird registration (until 01 January 2026) and the submission of abstracts (closes 19 January 2026).

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 07 November 2025

 

The 2026 SCAR Science-Policy Fellowship Programme is open for applications

SCAR 2026 960x540

“We are pleased to announce the 2026 SCAR [Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research]  Ant-ICON | SC-ATS science-policy fellowship programme for early-mid career researchers (EMCRs).  The aim of the fellowship programme is to provide the opportunity for EMCRs to gain experience in the science-policy interface from participating in Antarctic policy forums through the preparation and potential submission of a science/policy paper based on their research, in collaboration with SC-ATS. The fellowships are open to early-mid career researchers from all SCAR member countries. Preference will be given to researchers who have not previously participated in these meetings and are actively seeking to contribute.

The fellowship programme will fund two fellows in 2026 one to participate in the CEP/ATCM meetings in Hiroshima, Japan from 11-21 May 2026 (expected start date in January 2026), and one to participate in the SC-CAMLR/CCAMLR meetings in Hobart, TAS, Australia in October 2026 (expected start date in April/May 2026).  There may also be opportunities to participate in additional online meetings or activities related to these forums.”

The application deadline is 23 November 2025.

Find more information here.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 06 November 2025

 

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