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.

Contact the ACAP Communications Advisor if you wish to have your news featured.

Reverse zoonosis: introducing bacterial infections to sub-Antarctic and Antarctic seabirds

Marta Cerdà-Cuéllar (Centre de Recerca en Sanitat Animal, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain) and colleagues have published in the journal Science of the Total Environment on the likelihood of humans introducing bacterial infections to sub-Antarctic and Antarctic seabirds, including three ACAP-listed species.

Salmonella ser. Enteritidis was found in a Southern Giant Petrel Macronectes giganteus from Livingston Island, Antarctica. Campylobacter lari was found in a Southern Giant Petrel from Livingston Island and in two from sub-Antarctic Marion Island.  Findings suggest “a reverse zoonosis in Antarctica, whereby zoonotic enteric bacteria have been introduced by humans to Southern Ocean ecosystems”.  Sampled Northern Giant Petrels Macronectes halli and White-chinned Petrels Procellaria aequinoctialis were free of enteric bacteria.  The paper concludes: “At Gough and Marion Is., introduction likely occurred through personnel based at the South African scientific stations, despite strict biosecurity controls for more than two decades.  The introduction of these human-associated strains to these remote islands by migrating birds infected during migrating movements cannot be ruled out, but seems less plausible.”

The paper’s abstract follows:

“Reports of enteric bacteria in Antarctic wildlife have suggested its spread from people to seabirds and seals, but evidence is scarce and fragmentary.  We investigated the occurrence of zoonotic enteric bacteria in seabirds across the Antarctic and subantarctic region; for comparison purposes, in addition to seabirds, poultry in a subantarctic island was also sampled. Three findings suggest reverse zoonosis from humans to seabirds: the detection of a zoonotic Salmonella serovar (ser. Enteritidis) and Campylobacter species (e.g. C. jejuni), typical of human infections; the resistance of C. lari isolates to ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin, antibiotics commonly used in human and veterinary medicine; and most importantly, the presence of C. jejuni genotypes mostly found in humans and domestic animals but rarely or never found in wild birds so far.  We also show further spread of zoonotic agents among Antarctic wildlife is facilitated by substantial connectivity among populations of opportunistic seabirds, notably skuas (Stercorarius).”

Read more here.

With thanks to Peter Ryan.

Reference:

Cerdà-Cuéllar, M., Moré, E., Ayats, T., Aguilera, M., Muñoz-González, S., Antilles, N., Ryan, P.G. & González-Solís, J. 2019.  Do humans spread zoonotic enteric bacteria in Antarctica?  Science of the Total Environment 654: 190-196.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 01 January 2019

Postscript:  ACAP’s Information Officer made a total of 49 visits to Gough and Marion Islands over the period 1978 – 2014.  On two occasions he and others residing at the island stations suffered from “foodborne diarrhoeal illness” serious enough to require on-site medication, once at Gough, once at Marion.  The Marion episode was traced to chicken served for lunch.  In his opinion, the illness in both occasions was due to inadequate hygiene.  During these occasions largely untreated human wastes, grey water and food scraps (other than meat bones and egg shells) were dumped into the sea on a daily basis as regular practice at both islands.  Giant petrels and Sub-Antarctic Skuas Stercorarius antarctica were regularly in attendance when kitchen wastes were disposed of.  Food for thought!

Another year of ACAP Latest News with 261 postings: grateful thanks are due

It's the last day of the year and so time for some thank-yous.

ACAP Latest News has continued its policy of posting one news item each weekday during 2018, a total of 261.  Subjects have ranged widely, but all are centred on some aspect of the biology and conservation of procellariform seabirds, especially of the 31 species of albatrosses and petrels listed within the Agreement.

2018’s postings can be searched by keyword.  For example, the Critically Endangered Tristan Albatross Diomedea dabbenena, endemic to the UK’s Tristan da Cunha islands in the South Atlantic, garners 13 hits for the year.  All the news items posted to ALN going back around a decade – well over 3000 of them - are key-word searchable: there are no less than 245 that mention the Tristan Albatross.

A Tristan Albatross stands over its egg on Inaccessible Island in February 2011, photograph by Lourens Malan

All ALN items are posted to ACAP’s Facebook page, currently with 3787 friends.  The Facebook page also carries selected postings on non-ACAP listed procellariiform seabirds, including gadfly petrels, shearwaters, diving petrels and storm petrels, as well as on conservation news of the listed birds' breeding localities.

Keeping up regular postings is only possible with the willing help of correspondents who alert ACAP of news, including of scientific publications in the peer-reviewed literature and of reports produced by Party governments and NGOs, as well as supply photographs.  Grateful thanks are extended to all such correspondents.  Especial thanks must go to the following who have regularly supplied information or helped in other material ways during the course of 2018:

Barry Baker, Latitude 42 Environmental Consultants, Australia; Susan Mvungi, Niven Library, University of Cape Town, South Africa; Ria Olivier, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa, Stellenbosch University; Hob Osterlund, Kaua’i Albatross Network, Hawaii, USA; and Richard Phillips, British Antarctic Survey.

On a more personal note I thank past and present members of the ACAP Secretariat for their continued support during 2018 in my role as honorary Information Officer for the Agreement: Christine Bogle, Executive Secretary; Marco Favero, past Executive Secretary and Wiesława Misiak, Science Officer.

See you all next year!

 

ACAP’s Information Officer also rides a bike!

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 31 December 2018

A grand day out! Translocating Laysan Albatross eggs on Kauai for another season

Hands-on conservation of globally Near Threatened Laysan Albatrosses or mōlī Phoebastria immutabilis is continuing on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.

Recently, 16 fertile mōlī eggs were removed from incubating birds breeding within the Pacific Missile Range Facility, Barking Sands (PMRF) and given to birds deemed to have infertile eggs breeding elsewhere on the island on private properties along the north shore.

Fertility was first checked by “candling” the eggs in the field and then exchanges were made “in less than 30 seconds”.

An egg gets candled in the field by Pacific Rim Conservation biologists

  The black cloth acts as “a portable darkroom where he can shine a flashlight into the egg.  A fertile egg will have an embryo and a “spider” of blood vessels.”

The PMRF eggs are removed as part of an effort to reduce recruitment to the locality to reduce the chances of bird strikes with aeroplanes.  The eggs are often given to female-female pairs whose own eggs are usually infertile.

The egg translocation this year was a team effort among Pacific Missile Range Facility, Pacific Rim Conservation, Kaua’i Albatross Network and private property owners.

Watch a video of a 2018 egg exchange.

Read ACAP Latest News postings about the translocation efforts on Kauai over past years.

The 2018 translocation team. The Hawaiian Shaka hand gesture is used as a greeting gesture or to express thanks

Photographs by Hob Osterlund

With thanks to Hob Osterlund, Kaua’i Albatross Network.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 28 December 2018

Eleventh Meeting of ACAP’s Advisory Committee, Florianópolis, Brazil, May 2019: Second Circular available

The Eleventh Meeting of ACAP’s Advisory Committee (AC11) will be held from Monday 13 to Friday 17 May 2019, in the Jurerê Internacional Il Campanario Hotel, Florianópolis, Brazil.  Meetings of the committee’s Seabird Bycatch Working Group and the Population and Conservation Status Working Group will precede AC11 at the same venue (SBWG9 from Monday 6 to Wednesday 8 May, and PaCSWG5 from Thursday 9 to Friday 10 May).  A Heads of Delegation meeting will be convened on Sunday 12 May 2019 in the late afternoon/ evening.

The Jurerê Internacional Il Campanario Hotel in Florianópolis

Immediately prior to the Seabird Bycatch Working Group meeting it is planned to hold a one-day workshop on Sunday 5 May to discuss and review ACAP’s engagement strategy with Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs).  More details of this workshop will be provided in a subsequent meeting circular.

The first Circular gave information on meeting location and dates, submission of documents and applications from Observers.  The latest Circular (No. 2) gives information on making hotel reservations, completing registration forms and provides a draft agenda for the Advisory Committee meeting.  Details are also given on templates to be used when submitting meeting documents to the Secretariat.

Read the two meeting circulars in English, French or Spanish.

Christine Bogle, Executive Secretary & Nathan Walker, Chair, ACAP Advisory Committee, 27 December 2018

On-board cameras to continue monitoring of seabird mortality in New Zealand fisheries

A trial using on-board cameras on fishing vessels to monitor accidental capture of seabirds, including the ACAP-listed and globally and Nationally Vulnerable Black Petrel Procellaria  parkinsoni, in the Hauraki Gulf of New Zealand’s North Island that commenced in 2016 is to be extended for another year.  The trial aims at testing how well cameras can monitor seabird bycatch compared to human observers while also gathering information on how many seabirds are being caught.

 

Black Petrel at sea, photograph by 'Biz' Bell

Footage reviewed so far shows cameras and observers see similar numbers of hooked seabirds. The camera footage is clear enough to enable species identifications.

The camera trial is being financed by the three company members of the Black Petrel Working Group and the subsequent data analysis is being financed by Fisheries New Zealand.

Information taken from a WWF-New Zealand press release.

John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 26 December 2018

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