Pacific Rim Conservation

Pacific Rim Conservation

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Pacific Rim Conservation provides biological research and management services to government agencies, non-profit organizations, landowners, and a variety of other groups throughout the Hawaiian Islands and the Pacific region. We specialize in avian research of Pacific Island birds and design and implement research projects, conduct surveys, write management plans, provide project coordination serv

Photos from Pacific Rim Conservation's post 06/09/2026

Mahalo to everyone who joined us on Saturday for the World Oceans Day event at Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge!

We are so grateful for the opportunity to connect with our community, share our passion for seabird conservation, highlight ways we can work together to support healthier oceans, and try to inspire the next generation of environmental stewards 🫶

Thank you for talking story with us and for doing your part to protect our oceans and wildlife 🌊🐣💙

06/05/2026

Egg-cellent news from Nihoku: we have an active ‘A‘o nest! 🥚❤

2026 marks the third consecutive season that this ‘A‘o (Newell's shearwater; NESH) pair have nested inside in the Nihoku predator exclusion fence at Kīlauea Point National Wildlife Refuge. The male of this pair was translocated to Nihoku as a chick in 2018, while the female was socially attracted to the site.

In 2024, the pair marked a huge milestone for the project and fledged the first wild ‘A‘o chick from Nihoku. We’re hopeful they’ll be successful again this season!

To lean more about the Nihoku Ecosystem Restoration Project, visit www.nihoku.org

06/02/2026

We’re excited to share that the O'ahu ʻakihikēʻehiʻale have fledged!

From 2018–2022, our translocation team moved 110 ʻakihikēʻehiʻale (Tristram’s storm-petrel) chicks from Tern Island in Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument to James Campbell National Wildlife Refuge (JCNWR).

Translocated birds first returned in 2020 and began breeding in 2022. This season, 3 wild ʻakihikēʻehiʻale chicks successfully fledged from our growing seabird colony at JCNWR!

Establishing a colony on a higher island helps safeguard the species against sea level rise, which threatens colonies on low-lying islands like the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Each chick that fledges gives us hope for a more resilient future for this special species 🫶

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Honolulu, HI
96822