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 albatross ground count reveals over 600 000 pairs are breeding in the 2025/26 season – but will the volunteers be replaced by drones and temporal image differencing?

2025 26 count teamThe 2025/26 ground count volunteers on Midway Atoll, photograph by USFWS volunteer Dan Rapp

Once more, volunteers have conducted exhaustive ground counts of breeding albatrosses in Midway’s Atoll’s Eastern and Sand Islands.  Results for the 2025/26 season are now in.  Laysan Albatrosses Phoebastria immutabilis numbers were down by 5% from the previous season but were still the fourth highest count for the atoll at 589 623 occupied nests.  “It is not uncommon in a given year for population counts on Midway to increase or decrease by 10 to 25%.”  The Black-footed Albatross P. nigripes count of 28 246 occupied nests is the second highest.

The highest number of Vulnerable Short-tailed Albatrosses P. albatrus ever documented in one year at Midway with a total of eight individuals so far was recorded, including the well-known breeding pair George and Geraldine for their ninth breeding season (watch the video of them mutually allopreening), along with several of their offspring returning as juveniles.

“USFWS staff have confirmed that Wisdom [the world’s oldest-known Laysan Albatross] did not lay an egg this year, though she has been visiting Midway Atoll, including another recent visit.”

Alongside the labour-intensive, and potentially disturbing (requiring the wearing of burrow shoes or “Funny Feet”), annual ground count the drone research project completed its second field season.  “Temporal Image Differencing” by surveying the same areas multiple times allows researchers to compare drone images over time to identify breeding albatrosses from non-breeders, making for more accurate counts of the actual numbers of breeding pairs possible.  Read more about the drone project here with photographs and a video.

Perhaps future albatross counts on Midway will be undertaken only by drones, rather than by a team of volunteers.

You can watch breeding Laysan Albatrosses via a live-streaming camera; access it from here.

Information from the Facebook pages of the Friends of Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge and Pacific Islands: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 27 January 2026

Albatrosses in flight use wind and waves differently in two hemispheres

Wandering Albatross Drake Passage Kirk ZufeltA Wandering Albatross in the Drake Passage, photograph by Kirk Zufelt

Ian Maywar (School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, New York, USA) and colleagues have published open access in the journal Movement Ecology on comparing five species of albatrosses' use of wind and waves in the North Pacific and Southern Ocean.

The paper’s abstract follows:

Background

Albatrosses can commute long distances to feed during the breeding season by avoiding energetically costly flapping flight.  Energy from both wind and waves can be used to sustain soaring and reduce flapping flight, yet most studies of albatross flight have focused solely on the influence of wind.

Methods

To examine how wind and waves allow albatrosses to reduce energetic costs by limiting flapping flight, we analyzed how the flap rates of five albatross species (370 individuals) across two ocean basins varied with wind speed and swell height.

Results

For all study species, soaring using both wind and waves resulted in an 89–93% reduction in the number of flaps per hour and thus more energetically efficient flight.  We found notable differences in the relative importance of wind and waves for albatrosses breeding in the Southern Ocean and North Pacific  The flap rates of Southern Ocean species, black-browed (Thalassarche melanophris), grey-headed (T. chrysostoma), and wandering (Diomedea exulans) albatrosses, were better explained by variability in windspeed whereas those of North Pacific species, black-footed (Phoebastria nigripes) and Laysan (P. immutabilis) albatrosses, were better explained by variability in swell height.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that Southern Ocean species relied more on dynamic soaring by exploiting winds whereas North Pacific species relied more on wave-slope soaring using swells.  This divergence in behavior is likely the result of differences in the regional winds and swells between the two ocean basins.  Although windspeeds experienced by albatrosses in both oceans were similar, North Pacific species experienced greater swell heights, likely allowing them to extract more wind energy from waves than albatrosses in the Southern Ocean.  Our research highlights the importance of both wind and waves for albatross movement and the need to better understand environmental impacts on physiological drivers of foraging energetics to assess responses of seabirds to a rapidly changing climate.”

With thanks to Richard Phillips.

Reference:

Maywar, I.J., Phillips, R.A., Orben, R.A., Conners, M..G., Shaffer, S.A. & Thorne, L.H. 2026.  Differential impacts of wind and waves on albatross flight performance in two ocean basins.  Movement Ecology 14,1.  doi.org/10.1186/s40462-025-00614-w.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 26 January 2026

Good news for pelagic seabirds, such as the Wandering Albatross? The High Seas Treaty has entered into force

Wandering Albatross Chile Milena A. Maira MarchesseA Wandering Albatross off Chile by Milena Maira Marchese, Artists & Biologists Unite for Nature (ABUN) for ACAP

The Agreement under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement or High Seas Treaty) was adopted by UN Member States on 19 June 2023 and entered into force 120 days later on 17 January 2025, following 60 ratifications.  The treaty covers roughly two-thirds of the ocean that lies outside national waters and Exclusive Economic Zones.

“The Treaty opens the door to protecting nearly half our planet with new tools to establish marine protected areas and ensure that the benefits of the high seas are shared equitably, especially with developing countries and small island states.”

The BBNJ Treaty allows for creating marine protected areas (MPAs), conducting environmental impact assessments (EIAs), sharing marine genetic resources and building capacity for developing nations.

Although the signature period closed on 20 September 2025, countries are still able to become parties to the BBNJ Agreement by acceding.  All 13 Parties to the Albatross and Petrel Agreement have signed the High Seas Treaty.  To date, seven of them have become Parties to the treaty by ratification or other means.  For the latest status of signatures and ratifications, visit the UN Treaty Collection website.

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 23 January 2026

Diving ecology of three ACAP-listed Procellaria petrels puts them at risk without best-practice mitigation

Procellaria dives
Density plot of maximum dive depths for (A) Westland Petrels, (B) White-chinned Petrels, and (C) Black Petrels. Values on right-hand side of each graph indicate the following: In red sections, the proportion of dives between 0 and 5 m is shown, in orange, the proportion of dives between 0 and 10 m, and yellow, the proportion of dives between 0 and 20 m.  From the publication

Maria Rosa Düssler (School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand) and colleagues have published in the journal Animal Conservation on diving depth and speed in three species of Procellaria petrels.

Many seabirds are at risk of bycatch including in pelagic and demersal longline fisheries.  Bycatch mitigation methods must be informed by seabird foraging behaviour to be effective. Deep-diving seabirds are especially vulnerable to bycatch and also increase risks for less adept divers by bringing baited hooks back to the surface.  We deployed time-depth recorders paired with geolocation sensors or GPS loggers in Aotearoa New Zealand to quantify the diving ecology of three Procellaria petrel species (combined total number of dives = 12,767), all of which are vulnerable to bycatch in longline fisheries.  We present the deepest dives recorded for each species, with Westland Petrels (Procellaria westlandica; n = 32) reaching 17.3 m, White-chinned Petrels (P. aequinoctialis; n = 14) reaching 21.7 m, and Black Petrels (P. parkinsoni; n = 10) reaching 38.5 m, the deepest dive recorded by a Procellaria petrel.  All species dived faster than the best practice longline sink rate of 0.5 m/s.  All dived throughout both day and night, but Black Petrels dived more frequently during the day, while Westland Petrels dived more frequently at night.  These results suggest that simultaneous implementation of weighted branch lines, bird-scaring lines, and night setting is necessary to reduce bycatch in pelagic longline fisheries.  This integrated approach effectively protects hooks from deep-diving Procellaria petrels and prevents them from retrieving hooks and increasing risk to other seabirds.  These results also bear direct relevance for custom, target-specific mitigation methods in demersal longline fisheries.  Overall, we provide the most in-depth investigation into Procellaria petrel diving ecology to date with wide-ranging implications for seabird conservation globally.”

Reference:

Düssler, M.R., Fischer, J.H., Rowley, O., Bell, E., Charteris, M., Elliott, G., Parker, G.C., Rexer-Huber, K., Simister, K., Taylor, G., Walker, K., Debski, I. & Wittmer, H.U. 2026.  Diving ecology of Procellaria petrels highlights the necessity of combining bird-scaring lines, weighted branch lines, and night setting in pelagic longline fisheries.  Animal Conservation doi.org/10.1111/acv.70057.

With thanks to Igor Debski, Department of Conservation, New Zealand

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 21 January 2026

The Seabird-Safe Fishing Toolkit follows ACAP’s Best Practice Advice for longline tuna fisheries

Toolkit mapExample of a Seabird Risk Zone map from the Seabird-Safe Fishing Toolkit

The Seabird-Safe Fishing Toolkit is an interactive website for longline tuna fisheries wanting to make their fishing safer for seabirds.  The toolkit provides the best available guidance on how to avoid catching seabirds and ensure good practice.  The guidance is based on ACAP’s Best Practice Advice.

The toolkit can be used to identify where threatened seabirds range, assess the current state of seabird-safe fishing and explore options to improve seabird safety over time.  This will support fisheries to meet the demands of consumers for environmentally sustainable tuna and secure access to high-value markets.

The Seabird-Safe Fishing Toolkit was launched online in November last year with eight leaders across the tuna supply chain and the world's sustainable seafood initiatives explaining in one hour and 27 minute video how they will use the toolkit to protect seabirds.  The event was presented in English with simultaneous interpretation into Chinese and Japanese.

The toolkit is a New Zealand-led project, developed through the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Oceans and Fisheries Working Group and supported by five co-sponsor economies: Chile, People’s Republic of China, Peru, Chinese Taipei and the United States.

Read an earlier article in ACAP Latest News on the development of the Seabird-Safe Fishing Toolkit.

With thanks to Igor Debski, Department of Conservation, New Zealand

John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 21 January 2026

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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