HONOLULU — Wisdom, a moli (Laysan albatross) and world’s oldest known, banded wild bird, hatched a new chick last week at Midway Atoll.
Biologists first observed the egg pipping on Friday, Jan. 29. After several days, the chick hatched on Monday, Feb. 1.
Every year, millions of albatrosses return to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge and Battle of Midway National Memorial.
Beginning in October, birds return to their same nesting sites and reunite with their mates in the world’s largest colony of albatrosses. Wisdom and her mate, Akeakamai, have been hatching and raising chicks together since at least 2012, when biologists first banded Akeakamai.
“At least 70 years old, we believe Wisdom has had other mates,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biologist Dr. Beth Flint. “Though albatross mate for life, they may find new partners if necessary — for example, if they outlive their first mate.”
Albatross don’t typically lay eggs every year, and when they do they lay only one egg.
Each chick that makes it to adulthood makes a difference for the future of the albatross population. Biologists estimate that Wisdom has hatched at least 30 to 36 chicks in her lifetime.
In 2018, biologists observed the chick that she fledged in 2011 just a few feet away from her current nest. Countless generations of albatrosses on Midway Atoll have a similar family reunion each year.
The incubation period after an albatross lays an egg is typically 65 days – most chicks on Midway Atoll hatch in January or February.
Wisdom laid her egg sometime during the last few days of November. Soon after, Wisdom returned to sea to forage, and her mate Akeakamai took over incubation duties.
Albatross parents share incubation duties, and once chicks hatch, share feeding duties. Parents feed their chicks a diet rich in fish eggs and squid by regurgitating the food they forage while at sea into the waiting mouths of their hungry chicks.
The fatty acids and nutrients can sustain a chick for a number of days between feedings. Chicks fledge, fly for the first time, in the months of June and July.
Nearly 70% of the world’s moli and almost 40% of ka‘upu (black-footed albatross), as well as endangered makalena (short-tailed albatross) all rely on Midway Atoll. in addition to albatrosses, more than 20 other bird species breed at Midway Atoll, most of them tropical seabirds. In total, over three million individual birds call the refuge and memorial home.
Throughout the monument, scientific research and monitoring plays an essential role in managing wildlife, including seabirds.
Surveys and banding projects conducted in the monument and throughout the world help scientists better understand the life cycles and migration patterns of birds.
Biologists first identified and banded Wisdom in 1956, but the very first albatross was banded on Midway Atoll in 1936. To date over 275,000 albatrosses have been banded at the refuge and memorial.
By pairing modern-data analysis with detailed current and historical records, biologists can make more-informed management decisions that ensure seabirds have the habitat and resources they need in the future.
“Each year that Wisdom returns, we learn more about how long seabirds can live and raise chicks,” said Flint. “Her return not only inspires bird-lovers everywhere, but helps us better understand how we can protect these graceful seabirds and the habitat they need to survive into the future.”
Biologists and volunteers are working to restore the habitat seabirds need at Midway toll and remove threats like invasive predators, because protecting the future for seabirds mean protecting the places they call home.
Located on the far northern end of the Hawaiian archipelago, Midway Atoll Refuge and Memorial is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and lies within the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument.
It is one the oldest atoll formations in the world, provides nesting habitat for millions of seabirds, and is a touchstone for one of the most significant naval battles of World War ii, and in history, the Battle of Midway. To learn more about Midway Atoll, see fws.gov/refuge/midway_atoll/.
Wonderful article about a remarkable bird. Thank you.
Great article. I personally have a gut feeling that due to the popularity wisdom has gained, she may not be the same albatross. I have a feeling she may have perished and another was tagged. There is an article in February about a birth. Then less time it takes for a full albatross pregnancy she is suddenly giving birth again. The Timeline is off if following facts. I believe they retagged another albatross with the same band.