Public presentation at Lyman Museum May 23: “ʻAlalā: Restoring Hawaiʻi’s Native Crow to the Wild”

Posted on Apr 7, 2016 in News & Events

May 23, 2016, 7:00-8:30 p.m.  ‘Alalā: Restoring Hawai‘i’s Native Crow to the Wild. 

Our endemic Hawaiian crow, the ‘alalā, once made its home across the length and breadth of Hawai‘i Island, but today, owing to a variety of threats in the wild, these birds exist only in captivity.  Happily, successful captive breeding and conservation efforts have helped to rescue this native Hawaiian species from the brink of extinction.  In the Fall, ‘alalā will be restored to their natural habitat and these very intelligent birds will take their place once again among the fauna of Hawaiian forests.

Tonight we welcome Lea Ka‘aha‘aina of the ‘Alalā Project (Hawai‘i Dept. of Land and Natural Resources), who relates the amazing account of the ‘alalā’s recovery and plans for its upcoming release.  Come learn more about this beloved bird, found nowhere else on Earth!

Free to Lyman Museum members; $3 nonmembers.  Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for evening public programs.  Limited seating; first come, first seated.   Additional parking next door at Hilo Union School.

For more information, please visit the Lyman Museum website