Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 40, Number 8, 1 August 2023 — “Celebrate Honeycreepers” Students Advocate to Save a Dying Species [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

“Celebrate Honeycreepers” Students Advocate to Save a Dying Species

By Meredith Enos, Kealaiwikuamo'o, Kamehameha Schools In classrooms, there are many ways to measure what students are learning. For Kumu Ben Catcho, Jr., of Nā Wai Ola Puhlie Charter School, his sign eame in the form of a Lego 'i'iwi bird created by one of his students after school. "It all happened when a haumana who was brainstorming ideas for his manu project saw me pull out a new Lego set for my class," Catcho said. "He approached me and asked for the Legos, and returned to his table and created an 'i'iwi! His creativity showed me an out-of-the-box way to express 'ike from the months of learning about our native honeycreepers." Similarly, a wide array of "out-of-the-box" thinking, from schools, environmentalists and policymakers may be the way to save these animals from imminent extinction. This student was just one of thousands of students in 29 schools across the pae aina who participated in a program that combined learning about ecosystem heahh, culture, environmental issues, and advocacy through focusing on the critically endangered Hawaiian honeycreepers. Their efforts worked: August 8 was recognized by the Hawai'i State Legislature as Celebrate Hawaiian Honeycreepers Day across the state. Several events will raise the awareness of these important species and educate the broader community on how we ean help their continued survival. Onee, over 50 endemic species of these birds called Hawai'i home, but only 17 remain today, with four species on the brink of extinction if nothing is done to stop the spread of avian malaria by mosquitos. One species, the 'akikiki on Kaua'i, has seen its numbers plummeī in the last year from 40 individual birds down to just five remaining in the wild. In response to this urgent threat, kumu, haumāna, and members of the Maui Forest Bird Recovery Project, Kaua'i Forest Bird Recovery Project, American Bird Conservancy, Coordinating Group on Alien Pest Species (CGAPS) and Kamehameha Schools worked for six months with haumāna on the legislative processes, through writing testimonies and conducting research on Hawai'i's endemic honeycreepers. Approximately 2,000 students submitted testimonies to the State House of Representatives, prompting the Hawai'i State Legislature to designate Aug. 8, 2023, as "Celebrate Honeycreepers Day" via HCR81. "I have lived in Hawai'i, on the island of O'ahu, for all 13 years of my life. Although I have never gotten the ehanee to see one of our native birds for myself, I know how beautiful and unique they all are - and onee were," Charis Pettiford, an 8th grade student at Moanalua Middle School testified. "They have served

such a large part in keeping our forests alive, in watching over our islands long before people inhabited these lands. The least we ean do is respect them by giving them this one day to be honored. Please consider this bill, for Hawai'i's silent guardians." The designation of Hawaiian Honeycreeper Celebration Day is just one element of a longer, multi-pronged approach to both grow appreciation of our native birds, and also encourage everyday kama'āina to do their part in protecting these endangered species. "In the last few months there have been many hearings in the state legislature relating to the efforts to save our endangered birds and this engagement of our loeal youth and native Hawaiians in particular has been very important," Sen. Mazie Hirono said in a May 2023 hearing. "It's been very moving because these are young people who are passionate about their desire to save these remaining native birds" Inspired by this outpouring of support for the manu (birds), Hirono advocated for help at the federal level, and in June 2023, U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Deb Haaland announced that $16 million in federal funding will be committed to the fight to protect the Hawaiian honeycreepers. This crucial funding will further these priorities: captive care and establishing new bird populations, research and monitoring, engagement with the Native Hawaiian community and mosquito eradication. This last objective is particularly important, as avian malaria ean kill a honeycreeper from a single mosquito bite, and has decimated the native bird population. One of the most promising and quick interventions is the well-established method of introducing ineompatible male mosquitos - whieh don't bite - into an area to breed with the existing female population. These male mosquitos carry the Wolhaeehia bacteria that occurs naturally in mosquitos. But the introduced mosquitos have a different strain of wolhaeehia, whieh means the two populations cannot create viable offspring and the mosquito population plummets as a result. "This technique is used extensively to control the mosquito population in places where viruses such as Dengue fever threaten human life," Luka Zavas, Birds, Not mosquitos outreach manager at the American Bird Conservancy, says. "It's an innovation on an existing technique, and the research indicates that we ean safely use this technique to help our honeycreepers." For his part, Catcho plans to continue working with his haumāna on conservation efforts. "We are teaching our students the power of their voices. When they eomhine their passion and creativity to the environment, they ean make a difference in their eommunities." ■

Pictured here is the highly endangered 'akikiki. There are only 40 'okikiki left in the wild wilh onother 48 in captivity in an effort to sove the species. Avian moloho is the primory reason for tne species' decline. Mosquito erooicotion using the Wolhaeehio bacterio is one of the most promising interventions to sove our notive Howoiion honeycreepers. - Photo: DtNR/Robby Kohley