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View video on the Hawaiian honeycreeper named Christmas at https://vimeo.com/783781486. Photo from DLNR |
The ʻAkiapōlāʻau named Christmas, and also called Mele, is identified by his red and green leg band used by researchers to identify him when he’s caught in mist nets in the sprawling 19,000-acre Pu‘u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve outside Hilo.
ʻAkiapōlāʻau, Hawaiian honeycreepers endemic to Hawai‘i Island, have long, curved beaks evolved to fill the niche occupied by woodpeckers. They feed on insects from the branches of native trees and nectar from flowers shaped like their bills and also look for larvae on the forest floor. An endangered species, there are only around 1,900 ʻakiapōlāʻau remaining.
The ʻAkiapōlāʻau named Christmas, and also called Mele, is identified by his red and green leg band used by researchers to identify him when he’s caught in mist nets in the sprawling 19,000-acre Pu‘u Maka‘ala Natural Area Reserve outside Hilo.
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The Hawaiian honeycreeper named Christmas has been banded and studied. He is nine years old. Photo from DLNR |
He said that “1,900 birds seem like a high number, but ʻakiapōlāʻau have been on the endangered species list since 1967 because of their low population and reproductive numbers, a fragmented population and habitat loss. However, aggressive forest restoration, predator control, and removal of feral ungulates in the natural area reserve and by neighboring watershed partners is painting a really heartening story.”
ʻAkiapōlāʻau population increases can be attributed to those decades of forest management and restoration, and recent efforts to reduce feline and rodent predators.
Another endangered bird of keen interest to Mossman is the ʻōmaʻo "because they eat fruit and are doing some planting (forest restoration) for us. They’re actually helping us to regenerate the native forest even quicker than if we were doing it ourselves.”
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ʻŌmaʻo on Mauna Loa where they were seen hopping around lava flows in the recent eruption. Photo from DLNR |
Tens of thousands of koa trees have been planted at Pu‘u Maka‘ala and on neighboring lands, but it takes roughly ten years for them to become good bird habitat. Mossman says many of the koa were planted in the last seven or eight years, but already ʻakiapōlāʻau and ʻalawī are starting to use the koa trees.
One of Christmas’ offspring has moved from the north side of the NAR to the south side, to an area where 10,000 koa trees have been planted. “It’s rewarding to see a ʻakiapōlāʻau we banded as a baby in this kipuka, and he has now settled in a completely different place. So, we’ve seen three generations of ʻakiapōlāʻau, in the five years I’ve been working here.”
Mossman noted. “It’s been really nice to see that we can keep tabs on these birds, track their relationships, and observe how they’re taking advantage of what we’ve created for them. Something more to celebrate this holiday season.”
$20,867,981 in Community Project Funding that he secured in the omnibus government funding Fiscal Year 2023 bill. "This funding responds directly to some of the most pressing needs in Hawaiʻi's 2nd Congressional District and results from numerous congressional site visits," made by Kahele and his team in 2022, said a statement from his office.
The projects include: $744,000 to Department of Land & Natural Resources for a Forest Health Project; $372,000 for the Hawaiʻi Agriculture Foundation STEM programs that incorporate innovative agriculture technologies; $1,000,000 for the The Nature Conservancy for Hawai'i and Palmyra; and $745,000 for the Hui Malama O Ke Kai Youth Development Community Center.
LEGISLATION TO HELP VETS IN MARSHALL ISLANDS, PALAU, AMERICAN SAMOA, GUAM, NORTHERN MARIANAS, MICRONESIA, PUERTO RICO AND U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS has been signed by the U.S. President. It was introduced by Senators Mazie Hirono and Delegate Gregorio Kilili
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs "has a duty to provide quality, accessible care and support to all of our veterans, no matter where they live," said Hirono. "This legislation will help ensure VA is aware of, and responsive to, the needs of U.S. veterans living in outlying areas and the Freely Associated States. As a member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, I'm glad to see this legislation signed into law to help VA better serve our veterans across the Pacific."
As a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator Hirono also secured numerous defense-related provisions in the FY23 NDAA, including $1 billion for the closure of the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility on O'ahu, as well as nearly $800 million for other military infrastructure projects across Hawai'i.
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