WISDOM FEEDING HER CHICK
Photograph by USFWS Midway Wildlife Biologist, Pete Leary
In a March 21 News Release, the USFWS has officially announced that
WISDOM
has returned to her chick following earlier reports of her possible loss
in the aftermath of the Tsunami of March 10, 2011.
The Mana'o Akamai (Spirit of Wisdom) is strong.........
This 60 year old Female Laysan Albatross
has been successfully raising chicks
on Midway for several decades and is
THE OLDEST KNOWN BIRD LIVING IN THE WILD.
Mixed results following the tsunami were understandable for many reasons.
Adult Albatrosses share in the raising of their single offspring.
Both partners switch off during the nesting season,
flying hundreds of miles to feeding grounds,
returning to feed their young one a mix of sea life,
composed of a high percentage of flying fish eggs and squid.
Wisdom must have left Midway shortly after or even during
the time of the tsunami which swept away and/or directly killed
approximately 110,000 juvenile Laysan and Blackfooted Albatross chicks
and about 2,000 adult Albatrosses.
Many more seabirds were killed, including shearwaters and petrels.
Burrow nesters, these seabirds are more difficult to count than the
cup nesting and much larger Albatrosses.
Weighing about 8 pounds, Wisdom has survived life on Midway
through many years of the build up of ocean plastic that annually
kills about one million seabirds worldwide.
Tsunamis are not preventable and the low lying Pacific islands
where many seabirds nest are in harms way whenever severe quakes occur.
Rising Sea Levels also threaten their populations
and yet,
It is the death by plastics (legos, bottle caps, pens, markers, sheeting, lighters, toothbrushes,
fishing gear, broken crates, combs, brushes, and other items
we fail to successfully repurpose
enter rivers, streams, storm drains, and seas
then float out into the ocean.
Looking for a Squid, Albatrosses
mistake the glisten of a bottle cap for food, snatch it up,
then fly back to Midway where their waiting young dine on
so much plastic, they are unable to consume natural food.
See earlier posts at SOAR and links at this site
for educational information, teaching tools, and
art/ecology ideas........
In the meantime, Wisdom has found safe feeding areas
and her survival suggests hope for the future of our
ONE OCEAN, her only home.
See http://www.fws.gov/pacific for more information
about Pacific Ocean issues and further Wisdom updates.
Thanks to Pete, John, and all out on Midway!!!!!!!!!
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