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.

Moving on from the Antipodes. Million Dollar Mouse eradicator to take on Auckland’s pigs, cats and mice

Stephen Horn has been appointed as the Pest Eradication Project Manager by New Zealand’s Department of Conservation to lead the eradication of the remaining introduced mammals on sub-Antarctic Auckland Island.  Stephen previously managed the “Million Dollar Mouse Campaign” that successfully baited New Zealand’s Antipodes Island last year in an attempt to eradicate its population of House Mice Mus musculus (click here).

A specialist team led by Stephen will now develop a feasibility study for the eradication of pigs Sus scrofa,feral cats Felis catus and mice from the island, intended to be published in February next year.  Read more here and here.

A White-capped Albatross on Auckland Island, photograph by Graham Parker

According to one news story, the pigs will be hunted and trapped with the aid of dogs (click here).

Read an earlier posting on the planned Auckland Island eradication in ACAP Latest News here.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 24 July 2017

More observers needed? Pelagic longliners around South Africa kill an estimated 450 albatrosses and petrels a year

Dominic Rollinson (FitzPatrick Institute, University of Cape Town, South Africa) and colleagues have published in the African Journal of Marine Science on the numbers of seabirds estimated killed by foreign and domestic pelagic longliners around South Africa.

The paper’s abstract follows:

“Both foreign and domestic pelagic longline fishing vessels operate in South Africa’s Exclusive Economic Zone and adjacent international waters where they kill hundreds of seabirds each year as bycatch.  To update assessments of the impact of the pelagic longline fishery on seabirds off South Africa, information on necropsied seabirds and national fisheries observer bycatch records were summarised for 2006–2013.  Foreign-flagged (Asian) vessels had 100% observer coverage throughout the study period, whereas only 6% of the fishing effort by South African-flagged vessels was observed (with no coverage in 2011–2013).  Vessels with observers caught seabirds at a rate of 0.132 birds per 1 000 hooks, resulting in an estimated mortality of 2 851 individuals (356 per year) comprising 14 species.  Extrapolation of the observed fishing sets to the unobserved fishing sets by the South African domestic longline fleet suggested that approximately 750 additional birds were likely killed during the study period, therefore a combined 450 birds were killed per year.  White-chinned petrel Procellaria aequinoctialis was the most frequently killed species (66%), followed by ‘shy-type’ albatrosses Thalassarche cauta/steadi (21%), black-browed albatross T. melanophris (7%), Indian yellow-nosed albatross T. carteri (3%), and Cape gannet Morus capensis (2%). The seabird bycatch rates were lower than in 1998–2005. Nationality of the vessel, time of line-setting, moon phase, year, season, fishing area, and seabird bycatch mitigation measures all influenced seabird mortality. Concurrent with 100% observer coverage, significant reductions in the seabird bycatch rate occurred in the Asian fleet in the latter years of the study, and these rates now approximate the national target (0.05 birds per 1 000 hooks). However, seabird bycatch rates remained high in the South African fleet, where no observers were deployed during 2011–2013, highlighting the need for independent observer programmes in fisheries - a matter of global interest. Suggestions are made as to how seabird bycatch by pelagic longline fisheries off South Africa may be further reduced.”

 

A Shy Albatross trails a fishing line, photograph by Robert Hynsco

Reference:

Rollinson, D.P., Wanless, R.M. & Ryan, P.G. 2017.  Patterns and trends in seabird bycatch in the pelagic longline fishery off South Africa.  African Journal of Marine Science 39: 9-25.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 21 July 2017

Infrasound for seabird navigation: a postdoctoral opportunity in movement ecology

A postdoc is required at the School of Environmental Sciences, University of Liverpool to study whether seabirds can detect infrasound (click here).

“You will work on a large collaborative grant, examining the use of infrasound for seabird navigation. The post will involve the analysis of large seabird bio-logging datasets, to examine the global movement decisions of individuals, populations and species. You will work with other researchers on the grant to integrate movement trajectories with atmospheric and oceanographic models and, design and implement, novel analytical techniques to capture movement decisions and navigation. Combining these with new measures of aural structures, the post will conduct phylogenetic analyses on seabird movement, habitat choice and navigation across species. The grant will involve four post-doctoral researchers and this specific post will focus on seabird ecology and movement. The data will be gathered from pre-existing bio-logging projects and novel bio-logging devices will be developed to measure in situ infra-sound with a variety of environment variables. Overall, the project will address whether seabirds can detect infrasound, alter their behaviour in response to it and assess its importance in the life-history of different species. You should have a PhD in biology or ecology. The post is available from 1 October 2017 until 31 September 2020.”

Shy Albatross flying by Aleks Terauds 

Shy Albatross - photograph by Aleks Terauds

Closing date for applications is 29 August 2017.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 20 July 2017

The next International Seabird Group Conference will be held in Liverpool

The 14th International Seabird Group Conference of the (UK) Seabird Group is to be hosted by the Seabird Ecology Group (SEGUL) at the University of Liverpool, UK over 3-6 September 2018.

“The conference promises an exciting showcase of the latest seabird research, located within the heart of the city of Liverpool, famous for its maritime history and cultural diversity. Registration will open in September of this year and a website will be launched soon.  Please keep your eye on our website - http://seabirdgroup.org.uk/ - for further information.  We will also publicise information, as it becomes available, via our Facebook and Twitter accounts. For those of you on Twitter, you can follow the hashtag #seabirds18.”


 

Manx Shearwater, photograph by Nathan Fletcher

The 13th International Seabird Group Conference was held at Edinburgh University in September 2016.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 19 July 2017

Agendas for ACAP’s September meetings in Wellington, New Zealand are now available

The Tenth Meeting of ACAP’s Advisory Committee (AC10) will be held from Monday, 11 September to Friday, 15 September 2017, in the CQ Comfort and Quality Hotels, Wellington, New Zealand.

Meetings of the Seabird Bycatch Working Group, and the Population and Conservation Status Working Group will precede AC10 at the same venue (SBWG8 from Monday 4 to Wednesday, 6 September, and PaCSWG4 from Thursday, 7 to Friday, 8 September).

A Heads of Delegation meeting will be convened on Sunday, 10 September 2017 in the late afternoon/ evening.

Agendas for all three meetings (SBWG8, PaCSWG4 and AC10) are now available on this web site.

Globally Endangered Atlantic Petrel Pterodroma incerta, photograph by Kalinka Rexer-Huber and Graham Parker

As decided during AC9, a workshop on the conservation of gadfly petrels Pterodroma and other small burrowing petrel species will be held on Saturday 9 September 2017.  Information on the workshop and on planned outings during the meetings will be posted as they become available.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 18 July 2017

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