In effort to save the seabirds volunteers remove invasive plants

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Park Ranger Jacqueline Olivera ends her morning with volunteers taking time to appreciate the ocean view near the water’s edge near Kahili Beach (Rock Quarry’s) in Kilauea. Volunteers were residents and visitors.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Volunteers carry buckets and tools to remove invasive species at Kahili Beach (Rock Quarry’s) in Kilauea. To allow for social distancing, the event was kept small with just five volunteers participating.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

A volunteer helps Kaua‘i National Wildlife Refuge Complex Facilities Manager Steve Minamishin install a sign to alert pet owners to keep dogs leashed. Dogs can kill young, ground-nesting birds like the red-tailed tropic bird and the nene.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Kaua‘i National Wildlife Refuge Complex Visitor Services Manager Jennifer Waipa briefs volunteers on the invasive-species-removal work they would comple Saturday near the point at Kahili Beach (Rock Quarry’s) in Kilauea.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Indian fleabane is thick and woody, making tools essential for its removal.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

A large, red-tailed tropic fledgling sits in its ground nest waiting for its parents to return with food. Invasive-species removal helps restore ground-nesting bird habitat to include more plant species that birds evolved to thrive with.

Laurel Smith / The Garden Island

Candice Mack cuts down invasive Indian fleabane at Kahili Beach (Rick Quarry’s) in Kilauea Saturday as part of the Kaua‘i National Wildlife Refuges’ celebration of Public Lands Day. Mack is vacationing from Los Angeles.

KILAUEA — In honor of Public Lands Day, the Kaua‘i National Wildlife Refuge Complex hosted a morning of invasive-species removal at Kahili Beach (Rock Quarry’s), where the Kilauea Stream meets the ocean.

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