ABOARD US COAST GUARD HC-130 HERCULES — Seven endangered Hawaiian monk seals that were found abandoned or malnourished late last year began their trip back to their remote island homes Thursday after being rescued and rehabilitated. ADVERTISING ABOARD US COAST
ABOARD US COAST GUARD HC-130 HERCULES — Seven endangered Hawaiian monk seals that were found abandoned or malnourished late last year began their trip back to their remote island homes Thursday after being rescued and rehabilitated.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration found most of the seal pups on the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, the northernmost islands and atolls in the Hawaiian Islands chain. The nonprofit Marine Mammal Center’s monk seal hospital on the Big Island then nursed the animals back to health.
On Thursday, the seals were loaded into a U.S. Coast Guard HC-130 Hercules airplane and flown from Kailua-Kona to Honolulu.
The Associated Press was on the flight.
The seals were then taken to an Oahu NOAA facility, where they will be kept until Sunday.
From there, the animals will be transported by boat to the islands they were rescued from. Six of the seals will return to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, and the seventh is headed to the privately owned island of Niihau. The voyage is expected to take about a week.
According to the California-based Marine Mammal Center, fewer than 1 in 5 monk seals survive their first year in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands because of threats including predation, entanglement and environmental changes.
There are only about 1,200 monk seals in the world, NOAA officials said, and they all live in the main or northwest Hawaiian Islands.
The seals being transported Thursday were all females, said Michelle Barbieri, an NOAA veterinarian with the Monk Seal Research Program who was aboard the flight.
“We focus our efforts on female seals because they’re going to grow up and contribute to the population in the future,” Barbieri said.
While in rehabilitation, the seals were slowly nursed to a healthy weight to help increase their odds of survival.
Eric Roberts, a marine mammal response coordinator with the Coast Guard in Honolulu, helped bring the pups to the hospital when they were found and was there to escort them home.
“At the Coast Guard, we pride ourselves on being lifesavers, and this is a unique opportunity where can actually contribute to saving a species,” Roberts said.
The Marine Mammal Center has successfully released eight seals so far, and this group is their biggest recovery and release effort to date.