World's oldest known wild bird has a new baby at 68 - Action News
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Science

World's oldest known wild bird has a new baby at 68

The oldest known wild bird in the world, who is at least 68 years old, has become a mother again at the Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge.

Wisdom the Laysan albatross hatched a chick earlier in February at Midway Atoll wildlife refuge

Wisdom sits in a nest at the Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge and Battle of Midway National Memorial with last year's chick in a 2018 photo. She and her mate recently hatched a new chick. (Bob Peyton/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via Associated Press)

The oldest known wild bird in the world has become a mother again at the Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, U.S. wildlife officials said.

The Laysan albatross named Wisdom hatched a chick earlier this month at the remote atoll northwest of Hawaii, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported Monday.

Wisdom is at least 68 years old and has raised at least 31 chicks, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials said. Wisdom was first banded as an adult in 1956.

Wisdom and her mate, Akeakamai, have been returning to the atoll to lay and hatch eggs since 2006. Laysan albatrosses mate for life and lay one egg per year.

"She's incredibly powerful as a symbol of why we do what we do and why people all over the world pay attention to her," said Beth Flint, a Fish and Wildlife Service biologist. "Wisdom is rewriting history about our understanding of survivorship, how long birds live, and how often they breed."

Albatross parents take turns incubating an egg for a little over two months. Chicks fly out to sea about five to six months after hatching. They spend most of their lives flying over the ocean feeding on squid and fish eggs.

Midway Atoll is home to about 3 million seabirds, including about 1 million albatrosses.

They return to the places of their birth to nest and raise their young, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.

"Midway Atoll's habitat doesn't just contain millions of birds, it contains countless generations and families of albatrosses," said Kelly Goodale, biologist at the refuge. "If you can imagine when Wisdom returns home she is likely surrounded by what were once her chicks and potentially their chicks."