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.

Midway Atoll’s Short-tailed Albatross pair, George and Geraldine, return for a new breeding season

Dec 2025 George and Geraldine Jon Plissner George and Geraldine (in front) on Midway Atoll, December 2025

George and Geraldine, the solitary pair of Vulnerable Short-tailed Albatrosses Phoebastria albatrus on Midway Atoll in the North Pacific, have returned to their usual Sand Island breeding site this month.  Alongside the pair is their 2019 fledgling.

Dec 2025 George and Geraldine and 2019 chick Jon Plissner The pair’s 2019 chick close to its parents, December 2025.  Photographs by USFWS Supervisory Wildlife Biologist Jon Plissner

The two birds have successfully raised and fledged five chicks in the last six breeding seasons, with no success in the last (2024/25) season.  Read more about George and Geraldine here and in previous articles posted to ACAP Latest News.

Information from the Facebook page of the Friends of Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 17 December 2025

 

The Mouse-Free Marion Project releases its final Quarterly Newsletter for 2025

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The latest issue, No. 16, December 2025, of the Quarterly Newsletter of the Saving Marion Island’s Seabirds: The Mouse-Free Marion (MFM) Project , along with all previous issues, can be downloaded from the MFM website here.

In this issue:

Year in review: reflecting on 2025 and looking ahead to 2026 - by The MFM Project Team

Saving an island one step at a time - by Roelf Daling, MFM Field Assistant

The Mouse-Free Marion Project becomes a 1% for the Planet Environmental Partner - by John Cooper, MFM News Correspondent

 

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John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 16 December 2025

 

ACAP releases a Species Infographic for the Southern Giant Petrel, the 21st and latest in the 31-species series

preview southerngiantpetrel eng 

The latest ACAP Species Infographic released today, the 21st to be produced in the 31-species series, is for the Southern Giant Petrel Macronectes giganteus (Least Concern).  It has been sponsored by the Australian Antarctic Division.  It is the fourth to be produced for an ACAP-listed petrel, following those for the Least Concern Northern Giant Petrel M. halli, the Near Threatened Grey Petrel Procellaria cinerea and the Vulnerable White-chinned Petrel P. aequinoctialis.  The other 17 infographics are all for albatrosses.  It is also being produced in the official ACAP languages of French and Spanish, and in Portuguese, reflecting it is a regular visitor to Brazilian waters.  These versions are expected to be released soon.

Southern Giant Petrel Marion Schön Bloody Beauty Pastels on Pastelmat Jaimie Cleeland
“Bloody Beauty”.  A scavenging Southern Giant Petrel, artwork in pastels by Marion Schön of Artists & Biologists Unite for Nature (ABUN) for ACAP, after a photograph by Jaimie Cleeland

The ACAP Species Infographic series has been designed to help inform the public, including school learners, of the threats faced by albatrosses and petrels and what is being and can be done to combat them.  They serve to complement the more detailed and referenced ACAP Species Assessments, the concise and illustrated ACAP Species Summaries and the ACAP Photo Essay series.  English and Portuguese language versions of the infographics produced to date are available to download here.  French and Spanish versions can be found in their respective language menus for the website under Infographies sur les espèces and Infographía sobres las especies.

The 21 infographics produced to date may be freely downloaded at a high resolution to allow for printing professionally in two poster sizes (approximately A2 and A3).  Please note they are only being made available for personal use or when engaging in activities that will aid in drawing attention to the conservation crisis faced by the world’s albatrosses and petrels – when ACAP will be pleased to receive a mention.  They should not be used for personal gain.

It is intended to produce two more ACAP Species Infographics in the first half of next year in support of World Albatross Day on 19 June (“WAD2026”) and its theme of Habitat Restoration.  They will be for the Endangered Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross Thalassarche chlororhynchos, endemic to the Tristan da Cunha islands, part of the United Kingdom Overseas Territory of St Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha in the South Atlantic and the Vulnerable Chatham Albatross T. eremita, endemic to the Chatham Islands, New Zealand.

The ACAP Species Infographics are all created by Thai illustrator Namasri ‘Namo’ Niumim from Bangkok.  Namo is a graduate of the School of Architecture and Design, King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Design.

With thanks to Jonathon Barrington, Karine Delord, Johannes Fischer and Richard Phillips for their help.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 15 December 2025

 

A Laysan Albatross moves from the French Frigate Shoals to Kauai

Laysan French Fr igate Shoals 3Laysan Albatross FV85 on Kauai, photograph by Hob Osterlund

A Laysan Albatross Phoebastria immutabilis with colour band FV85 was recently photographed incubating on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.  The band’s alphanumeric was not from a series known to be used on the island so it was assumed it had come from another breeding locality.

Laysan French Fr igate Shoals 2 

Photographer Hob Osterlund, Founder of the Kauaʻi Albatross Network, contacted the USA’s Bird Banding Laboratory with the bird’s details and heard back with a Certificate of Appreciation “in record time”.  It was metal and colour banded as a chick on 20 June 2009 on Tern Island, French Frigates Shoals in the northwestern Hawaiian Islands, some 700 km from Kauai.

Laysan French Fr igate Shoals 1The mystery Laysan Albatross on Kauai, photograph by Hob Osterlund

What the albatross was up to and where between 2009 and 2025 is, and is likely to remain, unknown.

Information and photographs from the Facebook page of Hob Osterlund – with thanks.

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

 

The Live Ocean Foundation is working to help conserve the ACAP-listed Black Petrel

Maureen Bennetts Black Petrel chick Biz BellBlack Petrel chick by Maureen Bennetts of ABUN for ACAP, after a photograph by Biz Bell

The Live Ocean Foundation is working to help conserve the ACAP-listed and Vulnerable Black Petrel Procellaria parkinsoni, endemic to just two islands off New Zealand’s North Island.  With only around 5000 breeding pairs remaining, the Black Petrel is considered to be one of New Zealand’s most at-risk seabirds, facing threats from fishing bycatch, predation, light pollution and habitat loss.  The project wishes to raise funds for 20 GPS trackers to follow fledgling Black Petrels on their first migration and uncover why so few return.  

“This project aims to reverse the decline of the tākoketai black petrel population through tracking their migration, international collaboration, and advocacy.  By supporting long-term research, developing mitigation strategies, and building partnerships across the Pacific Flyway, Live Ocean and its partners aim to rebuild the population to enable future translocation into historic habitats.”

Biz Bell of Wildlife Management International writes “The ultimate goal is to chart a course for recovery and protection of this on the brink species, so that we might see their return to some former nesting sites right around the North Island.”

You can support the project by making a donation here.

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