Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels
The Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels is a legally binding international treaty signed in 2001 and entered into force on 1 February 2004 when South Africa ratified as the fifth Party to the agreement.
It was created in order to halt the drastic decline of seabird populations in the Southern Hemisphere, particularly albatrosses and petrels procellariids. Albatrosses and petrels are threatened by introduced species on their breeding islands, pollution, and being taken as bycatch by longline fisheries, as well as by trawl and gillnet fisheries. The agreement requires that measures be taken by signatory governments to reduce bycatch; protect breeding colonies; and control and remove introduced species from breeding sites, especially on islands.
Currently, ACAP protects all the world's albatross species, seven Southern Hemisphere petrel and two shearwater species. The agreement marks an increasing international commitment to protect albatrosses and petrels.
Organization
The Executive Secretary of ACAP is Marco Favero, who is supported by a Science Officer, Wiesława Misiak, and an Information Officer, John Cooper. The secretariat is located at 119 Macquarie Street, Hobart in the state of Tasmania, Australia.The agreement entered into force on 1 February 2004. National representatives of the signatory countries meet regularly.
Location | Date |
Hobart, Australia | 10-12 November 2004 |
Christchurch, New Zealand | 13-17 November 2006 |
Bergen, Norway | 27 April - 1 May 2009 |
Lima, Peru | 23-27 April 2012 |
Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain | 4-8 May 2015 |
Nine meetings of ACAP's Advisory Committee have been held to date, the last in La Serena, Chile from 9 to 13 May 2016. The Advisory Committee is currently supported by three working groups for Taxonomy, Seabird Bycatch, and Population and Conservation Status.
Provisions
ACAP helps countries to implement species action plans, control the expansion of non-native predators, introduce measures reducing bycatch of seabirds, and support research in the sphere of the effective conservation of petrels and albatrosses. To this end it has published ACAP Species Assessments, booklets, mitigation factsheets, and a number of ACAP Conservation Guidelines, including for biosecurity; eradication of introduced mammals; translocation; and census and survey methods.One of the agreement's main activities is to provide expert advice on seabird bycatch mitigation to fisheries managers, both in domestic and high seas fisheries.
Species covered by the Agreement
The following 31 species of albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters are listed by the agreement.List of albatrosses covered by the agreement:
- Northern Royal Albatross
- Southern Royal Albatross
- Wandering Albatross
- Antipodean Albatross
- Amsterdam Albatross
- Tristan Albatross
- Sooty Albatross
- Light-mantled Albatross
- Waved Albatross
- Short-tailed Albatross
- Laysan Albatross
- Black-footed Albatross
- Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross
- Indian Yellow-nosed Albatross
- Grey-headed Albatross
- Black-browed Albatross
- Campbell Albatross
- Buller's Albatross
- Shy Albatross
- White-capped Albatross
- Chatham Albatross
- Salvin's Albatross
- Southern Giant Petrel
- Northern Giant Petrel
- White-chinned Petrel
- Spectacled Petrel
- Black Petrel
- Westland Petrel
- Grey Petrel
- Balearic Shearwater
- Pink-footed Shearwater
Member states
Canada, Namibia, and the United States regularly send observer delegations to ACAP meetings, but have not as yet acceded to the agreement. Japan has sent delegations in some years.