
Laysan Albatrosses breed on a coastal bluff on Kauai – safe from predicted sea level rise, photograph by Hob Osterlund
By far the largest part of the global breeding population of the Laysan Albatross or mōlī Phoebastria immutabilis is to be found on the low-lying atolls of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. In addition, smaller numbers breed on the inhabited Hawaiian islands of Kauai and Oahu, considered safe from sea level rise. Information is to hand that the numbers breeding on Kauai this season are the highest known.
Hob Osterlund, Kaua’i Albatross Network writes on Facebook “good news for the Mōlī Class of 2026: this year on Kauaʻi we have a total of 457 nests, which is an all-time high for the years weʻve been counting. Of course this number is tiny compared to the hundreds of thousands at Kuaihihelani (Midway Atoll), but we have three things albatross will need as Kuaihelani gets submerged by sea level rise: elevated bluffs, an absence of mongoose, and people who care”.
Laysan Albatrosses within Kauai’s Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge are also doing well, with a total of 194 occupied nests counted for the 2025/26 season, 40 more nests than in the previous season, according to the Facebook page of the Friends of Kauai Wildlife Refuges. These birds are now protected from feral pigs and other pests by predator-proof fencing (click here).
Other news from Kauai is that the Kīlauea Point NWR participated in the annual Laysan Albatross egg swap with the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF).
“The project is led by a team of Biologists from PMRF, located on the west side of Kauaʻi, and supported by our partners at Pacific Rim Conservation, along with the Refuge Biologist and FWS volunteers. “Due to the potential for airstrikes, mōlī in the PMRF colony are a risk to aircraft and to themselves. Therefore, their biologists employ multiple approaches as they work to reduce the size of their colony, while making investments in the success of other nesting sites across Kauaʻi. Through the project, fertile eggs are removed from the PMRF mōlī colony and transported to Kīlauea Point NWR where they replace non-viable eggs within our Refuge’s two colonies. Through a process called “candling”, biologists can identify eggs that are non-viable – either because they were not fertilized or are damaged. They can then “swap” the eggs and our adoptive nesters will get to raise ex-PMRF chicks, which will imprint upon the safe colonies at Kīlauea Point NWR and eventually return to our hatching sites, rather than PMRF.” (from Wild Times of December 2025, the online newsletter of the Friends of Kauai Wildlife Refuges).
John Cooper, Emeritus Information Officer, Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels, 01 January 2026
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