Here is the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service press release on the Dec. 9 storm damage at Tern Island, French Frigate Shoals.
RaisingIslands has covered this story in two previous posts, here and here. This press release was issued today (Dec. 21, 2012), in association with the return of the five-person Tern field crew to Honolulu after their evacuation from the island Tuesday.
The images suggest that, if anything, the initial reports of the damage were understated.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2012
Biologists Evacuated from Remote Pacific
Field Station
Storm damage to
Tern Island facility is extensive
A U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist and
four volunteers arrived safely in Honolulu early Friday after being evacuated
from their research station on Tern Island, which was extensively damaged during
an intense storm December 9. The experience was frightening but no one was physically
injured.
The pre-dawn morning storm produced high winds
that damaged all facilities on the field station 490 miles northwest of
Honolulu within the Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge, part of Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument. The living quarters,
storage facilities and boat sheds suffered extensive damage as did the communication
systems and solar panels. Damage to
nesting birds and habitat will be determined after photographs and eye witness
accounts are assessed.
The Tern Island biologists arrived in Honolulu
around 1 a.m. Friday after a two-day voyage in high winds and rough seas aboard
the M/V Kahana. The biologists were
safely evacuated from Tern Island December 18 with help from Fish and Wildlife
Service employees traveling from Johnston Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. The
Tern Island residents had sufficient food and water while waiting for the boat.
“We are extremely grateful for everyone’s
safety and well-being first and foremost, including those involved with the
shore-to-ship evacuation under very stiff wind conditions,” said Barry
Stieglitz, Refuge Supervisor for the Hawaiian and Pacific Island National
Wildlife Refuges. “It was a harrowing
experience for our employees, including four young volunteers, as they were awakened
by a freak wind burst that shook their living quarters.”
The residents told Stieglitz everything started
“popping” as wood panels and windows blew out and a boat shed was completely
destroyed.
“With their normal internet communication
seriously compromised and a satellite phone connection that often dropped, they
no doubt felt isolated,” Stieglitz said.
“We are very glad to have them home.”
Located on Tern Island within French Frigate
Shoals, part of Papahānaumokuākea Marine
National Monument, this U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service field station provides
critical shelter and a touchstone with wildlife for biologists to do research,
student-based education and restoration projects and to monitor hundreds of
albatross, wedge-tailed shearwaters and Bonin petrels, including a population
of Tristram’s storm petrels. These
biologists are also the eyes and ears that provide a year-round presence to
help protect marine and island ecosystems that provide life support for most of
Hawai‘i’s green turtle nesting population, the endangered Hawaiian monk seal
and extraordinary native marine life.
The first chance Monument employees in Honolulu
will have to view the damage will be from photographs the biologists carried
with them onboard the Kahana. Upon assessing the impacts to facilities and
habitat, the Service will begin to determine next steps.
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