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Kure Atoll Conservancy
Kure AtollConservancy

A 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that supports the State of Hawaiʻi's ongoing wildlife management and habitat restoration program that enhances biological diversity, ecosystem health, and cultural resources.

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  • Explore Kure
        • Explore Kure's history,
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        • Plants, Wildlife, Pests
          • Non-Native Plants
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        • Enhancing biological diversity,
          ecosystem health, and
          cultural resources of
          Kure Atoll in the Northwestern
          Hawaiian Archipelago.

        • Conservation Management & Biosecurity
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        • Outreach Education
        • Habitat Restoration Program
          • Invasive Plant & Tree Eradication Project
          • Native Plant Restoration Project
          • Dune Restoration & Creation Project
          • Habitat Restoration on the Abandoned USCG Runway Project
          • Pest Management
          • Laysan Duck Reintroduction & Habitat Creation Project
        • Pollution Reduction
          • Marine Pollution Monitoring & Removal
          • USCG Soil Remediation Project
        • Natural Resource Protection & Monitoring
          • Seabird Monitoring
          • Ecological Monitoring
          • Monk Seal Monitoring & Field Camps
  • Field Camp Blog

Fieldwork

Daily Waltz by Morgan Walter

2018-05-16
In: Field Camp Blog, Summer 2018, Summer Season
Tagged: Albatross Nesting, Camp Life, Ducks, Fieldwork

Hello All! We have officially finished our first month on Green Island, in Kure Atoll. Now that things have settled we are all starting to fall into place and fit into a rhythm. I wanted to share a bit of what our daily lives consist of to paint a betterRead More →

Invasive plant removal: “Are you ready? Always!” Firefly

2017-05-22
In: Field Camp Blog, Summer 2017, Summer Season
Tagged: communications, Fieldwork, Invasives, Restoration

IDENTIFICATION of a plant is critical for appropriate treatment and data collection. At the seedling stage, plants look quite alike. After weeks in the field, your eyes get familiar to the appearance for a given plant by its leaves, stem, shape, color, and texture. Also, some have a distinctive smellRead More →

Earth Day every day and our daily sweat

2017-05-09
In: Field Camp Blog, Summer 2017, Summer Season
Tagged: Ducks, Fieldwork, Invasives, Native Plants

The calendar reminded me that Saturday April 22nd was Earth Day! That day was a worldwide day of demonstration and remembrance that our planet needs care. On September 2014, I happened to be in Melbourne, Australia, for the Climate March. A sign always haunts me from that event: it featuredRead More →

He Pūkoʻa Kani ʻĀina

2017-03-26
In: Field Camp Blog, Winter 2016, Winter Season
Tagged: Camp Life, Departure, Fieldwork

Aloha mai e nā maka heluhelu, nā ʻohana, a me nā hoa piha i ke aloha iā Hōlanikū. Ua hōʻea nō ka pau ʻana o ko mākou noho ʻana i Hōlanikū nei. Hō ka wikiwiki o ka holo ʻana o ka manawa! I loko o koʻu makemake ʻole e haʻalele,Read More →

He Hana Luhi

2017-03-20
In: Field Camp Blog, Winter 2016, Winter Season
Tagged: Camp Life, Ducks, Fieldwork

Aloha mai e nā maka heluhelu, nā ʻohana, a me nā hoa piha i ke aloha iā Hōlanikū. He hana hou kā mākou i mālama ai i kēia mau pule ʻelua, a he hana luhi nō ia. Ua paʻa mākou i ka ʻimi a me ka mālama ʻana i nāRead More →

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Explore Kure

History
Field Research Station
Plants, Wildlife, & Pests

Our Work

Natural Resource Protection & Monitoring
Pollution Reduction
Outreach Education
Conservation Management & Biosecurities
Cultural Studies
Habitat Restoration

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All proceeds contribute directly to field camp use and matching funds for grants related to fieldwork

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