Kure Atoll, also known as Hōlanikū, is the northernmost coral atoll in the world and the most remote island in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands chain, situated approximately 1,370 miles (2,200 km) northwest of Honolulu at coordinates 28°25'N, 178°20'W.[1][2] This oval-shaped atoll spans about 6 miles (10 km) in maximum diameter, featuring a continuous outer fringing reef that encloses a turquoise lagoon up to 14 meters deep, with nearly 80,000 acres of coral reef habitat and only one permanent low-lying island, Green Island, rising to 6.1 meters in height.[1][2] As the oldest coral reef in the Hawaiianarchipelago, it lies near the Darwin Point, where coral growth barely outpaces subsidence, marking the northwestern limit of the island chain.[1][3]The atoll's geography includes seasonal sandbars like Sand Island and scattered patch reefs within the lagoon, supporting a diverse array of marine ecosystems despite its isolation 55 miles (89 km) west-northwest of Midway Atoll.[1][2] Kure Atoll is renowned for its exceptional biodiversity, serving as a vital nesting and wintering ground for millions of seabirds, including black-footed albatrosses, Laysan albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, tropicbirds, boobies, frigatebirds, terns, and noddies, many of which migrate from North America and Asia.[1][3] It also hosts a population of approximately 110 Hawaiian monk seals (as of 2024), a critically endangered species that uses the area for pupping and resting, alongside green sea turtles and a variety of marine life such as dolphins, sharks, jacks, goatfish, dragon morays, and 28 species of stony corals.[1][2][4] The surrounding waters teem with large invertebrates like echinoderms, crustaceans, and mollusks, as well as 92 species of algae, underscoring its role as a biodiversity hotspot with high fish densities ranging from 128 to 435 individuals per 100 m² in surveyed transects.[1][2] On land, native plants and introduced species like the Laysan duck—translocated for conservation—coexist amid efforts to eradicate invasives.[5]Historically, Kure Atoll was first sighted in 1823 by British explorer George Anson Byron and has been visited sporadically since, with shipwrecks such as the USS Saginaw in 1870 highlighting its navigational hazards.[1] Claimed for the Hawaiian Kingdom by King Kalākaua in 1886 and annexed by the United States in 1898, it was designated the Hawaiian Islands Bird Reservation in 1909 by President Theodore Roosevelt to protect its avian populations.[1] Early 20th-century guano mining leases were issued but never exploited, and the atoll saw limited military use during World War II before becoming a state wildlife sanctuary in 1981.[1][2]Today, Kure Atoll is managed as part of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, established in 2006, through a collaborative effort involving the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Marine Fisheries Service, and Hawaii's Department of Land and Natural Resources, with the Kure Atoll Conservancy overseeing on-site conservation.[1][5] Key initiatives focus on habitat restoration, invasive species removal, marine debris mitigation—such as removing over 2,700 pounds in 2003—and monitoring threats like plastic pollution, fisheries bycatch, and climate-induced coral bleaching.[1][5][2] Access is strictly limited to researchers and conservation personnel, preserving its status as an uninhabited preserve that embodies cultural significance as an ancestral kūpuna island in Hawaiian tradition.[3][5]
Geography
Location and extent
Kure Atoll is situated in the North Pacific Ocean at coordinates 28°25′N 178°20′W, marking it as the northernmost atoll in the Hawaiian archipelago and the northernmost coral atoll in the world.[6][7] It lies approximately 48 nautical miles (55 miles) west-northwest of Midway Atoll and about 1,500 miles northwest of Honolulu, positioning it at the extreme northwestern end of the Hawaiian island chain.[1][3] This remote location contributes to its status as the most isolated of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI), accessible primarily by boat or rare charter flights due to its distance from major landmasses and lack of regular transportation infrastructure.[3]The atoll features an oval shape with a maximum diameter of approximately 6 miles, formed by a nearly continuous coral reef that encloses a shallow lagoon roughly 5.5 miles across and several meters deep.[1] Including the surrounding reefs, the total area encompasses about 80,000 acres of coral reef habitat, highlighting its significant scale within the NWHI.[1]Administratively, Kure Atoll is part of Honolulu County in the U.S. state of Hawaii, though it remains uninhabited and unmanaged for civilian settlement.[8] Since its inclusion in the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in 2006, it has been co-managed by U.S. federal agencies—including the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS)—alongside Native Hawaiian organizations such as the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, emphasizing collaborative conservation efforts.[9][10]
Landforms and marine features
Kure Atoll features a classic atoll structure, comprising a nearly circular ring of coral reefs that encloses a shallow, sediment-built lagoon. The atoll spans approximately 10 km in diameter, with the reef rim forming a barrier that nearly encircles the interior lagoon.[2] Fringing reefs extend outward from the main barrier, contributing to the atoll's overall extent of about 167 square kilometers of shallow banks less than 100 meters deep.[7] The surrounding bathymetry reflects remnants of an ancient shield volcano, with the atoll platform rising from ocean depths exceeding 5,000 meters in the broader Pacific seafloor.[11]The primary landmasses are Green Island, the largest at roughly 0.73 square kilometers (180 acres) and located in the southeastern sector, and the smaller Sand Island, consisting of variable sandbars to the west.[12] Green Island, approximately 0.8 km in length, hosts an airstrip and remnants of former buildings from a U.S. Coast Guard station.[2] Sand Island is notably smaller and vegetated, though its form shifts seasonally due to sediment dynamics. Both islands rise to a maximum elevation of about 6 meters (20 feet) above sea level, rendering the atoll highly susceptible to wave erosion and sea-level rise.[13] There are no natural fresh water sources on the atoll; any water supply relies on imported or desalinated sources.[12]Marine features include the central lagoon, which averages 5-10 meters in depth with a maximum of 14 meters, punctuated by elongate patch reefs.[2] The outer reef slopes steeply beyond the crest, descending to depths of around 1,000 meters or more, while southwest passages provide the primary access to the lagoon, enabling vessel entry at depths up to 10 meters.[2] These passages, such as the main southwestern channel, facilitate water exchange between the lagoon and open ocean.[1]
Climate and environment
Weather patterns
Kure Atoll features a subtropical maritime climate, characterized by mild and stable temperatures averaging 72–82°F (22–28°C) year-round, with minimal seasonal variation due to its remote oceanic location.[14]Annual precipitation totals approximately 25–30 inches (635–762 mm), largely influenced by persistent trade winds that bring frequent showers, supplemented by occasional tropical cyclones; the period from May to October marks the drier season, while November to April sees increased rainfall from enhanced trade wind activity and frontal systems.[14][15]Dominant wind patterns consist of steady northeast trade winds averaging 10–20 knots (12–23 mph), which prevail for about 80% of the year and contribute to the atoll's consistent ventilation, though occasional gales can arise during winter months.[15][16]The atoll's position in the central North Pacific exposes it to tropical cyclones, with an average of 1–2 passages per year that generate significant wave action reaching up to 20 feet (6 m) and temporary disruptions to local conditions.[17][18]Long-term meteorological records from the U.S. Coast Guard LORAN station (operational 1960–1992) document notable variability in precipitation and wind intensity, including trade wind showers of 0.02–0.05 inches at four-hour observation intervals, with overall patterns showing stability.[19]
Environmental conditions and threats
Kure Atoll's remote location in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands contributes to relatively stable but fragile environmental conditions, characterized by low human disturbance and high exposure to oceanic influences. However, the atoll faces significant threats from accumulating marine debris, primarily plastics and derelict fishing gear, which washes ashore via currents from the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre. In 2003, expeditions removed 2,700 pounds of such debris from the atoll, including 997 pounds from designated study areas, highlighting the persistent influx that poses entanglement risks to marine life. Recent efforts under the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument have intensified removals, with over 191,860 pounds of derelict fishing nets extracted from the broader monument in 2024 alone, though Kure recorded comparatively lower volumes due to its position. In 2025, additional missions removed over 72,150 pounds of marine debris from remote reefs within the monument, including areas near Kure Atoll.[1][20][21][22]Climate change exacerbates these pressures through warming ocean temperatures and rising sea levels, directly impacting the atoll's low-lying coral islands and reef systems. Mass coral bleaching events, driven by elevated sea surface temperatures, affected Kure Atoll during the widespread 2014 heatwave in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, marking the sixth such incident and resulting in substantial bleaching across northern atolls. Projections indicate a sea-level rise of 1-2 feet by 2100 along U.S. coastlines, including Pacific atolls, which could erode Kure's emergent landforms and submerge habitats unable to accrete quickly enough.[23][24]Invasive species pose another chronic threat, though the atoll's isolation limits their establishment compared to more accessible sites. Historically, black rats (Rattus rattus) were introduced to Green Island, but a successful eradication occurred in 1995 through state-led efforts, establishing strict biosecurity protocols. A single rat was sighted in 2016 during U.S. Coast Guard remediation work, prompting immediate trapping and monitoring, with no further detections confirmed since. Other invasives, such as ants, have occasionally plagued nesting areas, necessitating ongoing surveillance.[25][26]Legacy pollution from mid-20th-century human activities persists as a point-source contaminant, particularly polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) from the former U.S. Coast Guard LORAN station on Green Island. These toxins, used in electrical equipment and buried in unlined landfills, have leached into soils and potentially marine environments, with cleanup operations mounted by the Coast Guard to mitigate spread.[27][28]The Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument plays a central role in monitoring these threats at Kure Atoll, coordinating annual debris surveys, invasive species checks, and pollutant assessments through interagency teams. While pre-2020 data robustly documents debris accumulation and bleaching patterns, post-2020 trends in plastic influx remain partially covered due to logistical challenges in remote access, underscoring the need for sustained remote sensing and field expeditions.[29][30]
Biodiversity and ecology
Terrestrial species
Kure Atoll supports a diverse array of terrestrial species, primarily seabirds, with limited vascular plants and a small population of marine mammals that utilize the land for resting and reproduction. The atoll's emergent landmasses, including Green Island and Sand Island, provide essential breeding and foraging habitats, though the total land area is minimal at approximately 0.81 square kilometers. Native species dominate, but introduced plants and historical invasive animals have posed challenges, addressed through ongoing management within the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument.[31]Avifauna is the most prominent component, with 18 species of breeding seabirds documented, including significant populations of Laysan albatross (Phoebastria immutabilis), where thousands of pairs nest annually, showing stable to increasing trends in nests from 2000 to 2019. Black-footed albatross (Phoebastria nigripes) also breeds here in stable numbers, with consistent chick production despite a slight decline in nests between 2010 and 2018. Wedge-tailed shearwater (Ardenna pacifica) and red-tailed tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda) are present as breeding residents, contributing to the atoll's role as a key site in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands for seabird reproduction. The endemic Laysan duck (Anas laysanensis), translocated to Kure in 2014 with 28 individuals, has established a growing population estimated at 87 individuals as of 2022 and at least 139 (including hatch-year) as of August 2025, supported by bimonthly monitoring and habitat enhancements. Migratory species, such as the white-tailed tropicbird (Phaethon lepturus), visit seasonally, while threats like plastic ingestion and avian botulism affect breeding success.[31][32][33][34][35]The only terrestrial mammal is the Hawaiian monk seal (Neomonachus schauinslandi), with a population of approximately 100–125 individuals that haul out on the atoll's beaches for pupping and molting; no other native or introduced land mammals occur. Seal numbers have improved since the mid-20th century declines due to human disturbance, with 91–113 seals recorded from 2013 to 2017, reflecting broader recovery efforts in the region.[1][31]Flora consists of 27 native vascular plant species, which form sparse vegetation adapted to sandy, saline conditions, including beach naupaka (Scaevola taccada), a key dune stabilizer and nesting substrate for seabirds. 'Aki'aki grass (Eragrostis variabilis) is another native coastal species that supports soil retention and bird habitats. Introduced plants number 34 species, with ironwood trees (Casuarina equisetifolia) established on Green Island since historical human activity; these invasives are targeted for removal to restore native ecosystems, alongside significant eradications of species like golden crownbeard (Verbesina encelioides), with major reductions achieved by 2010 across 188 acres, though ongoing management continues as of 2025. In 2021, the southern house mosquito (Culex quinquefasciatus), which arrived in 2016, was successfully eradicated through weekly treatments, enhancing habitat quality for native species.[31][13][36][37][38]Endemism is pronounced among terrestrial species, with the Laysan duck unique to the Hawaiian Islands and several plants, such as Achyranthes atollensis, restricted to the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands; shearwater populations may include locally adapted variants influenced by isolation. All terrestrial species are protected under Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument regulations, which prohibit introductions and mandate invasive species control, contributing to post-2010 recoveries such as increased Laysan duck breeding and stabilized albatross populations following the 2011 tsunami and 1995 rat eradication. Annual surveys and habitat restoration, including native plant propagation of 2,000–16,000 individuals yearly, ensure ongoing protection.[31][39][40]
Marine species and habitats
Kure Atoll's marine environment encompasses nearly 80,000 acres of coral reefhabitat, forming a nearly circular barrier reef that encloses a shallow lagoon and extends to fore-reef and deep-water zones.[1] This ecosystem supports a rich array of underwater biodiversity, characterized by pristine conditions due to the atoll's remote location in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. The lagoon features turquoise waters with branching and table corals, while fore-reef areas exhibit higher structural complexity and species diversity.[1] Deep mesophotic reefs, explored at depths exceeding 300 feet, harbor unique assemblages with unprecedented levels of endemism.[41]The atoll's coral reefs host 57 species of shallow-water stony corals (17 endemic), including robust table and branching forms that dominate the lagoon and fore-reef habitats.[1][31] These corals contribute to a diverse reef framework, despite the northern latitude's cooler waters, fostering habitats for associated marine life. Over 155 species of reef fishes inhabit these areas, with large schools of ulua (giant trevally), goatfish, and chubs commonly observed in the lagoon and near-shore zones.[12] Predatory species such as reef sharks and rare endemics like the masked angelfish and native grouper add to the dynamic fish assemblages, while deep reefs show 100% endemism in mesophotic fish, including the elegant anthias (Pseudanthias elegantissimus), Hawaiian pigfish (Bodianus bathycapros), and Struhsaker's damselfish (Chromis struhsakeri).[42][41]Invertebrate diversity is prominent, with large echinoderms, crustaceans, and mollusks thriving among the reefs; notable examples include giant clams (Tridacna spp.) and sea cucumbers (Holothuroidea), which play key roles in ecosystem health by filtering water and recycling nutrients.[1][43][2] These species, alongside dragon morays and knifejaws, contribute to the atoll's status as one of the last intact, predator-dominated reef systems.[42]Marine mammals frequent the atoll's waters, with resident spinner dolphins (Stenella longirostris) using the area for resting and socializing, and endangered Hawaiian monk seals (Neomonachus schauinslandi) foraging in adjacent habitats, where 100-125 individuals pup and rest.[12] The pelagic zone beyond the reefs supports migratory tuna and billfish, serving as a foraging ground that indirectly benefits seabird populations dependent on these resources.[1] Recent surveys indicate ongoing recovery from coral bleaching events in the 2010s, though comprehensive data on 2020s impacts remain limited.[41]
Geological history
Formation and evolution
Kure Atoll formed as part of the Hawaiian-Emperor volcanic chain through the interaction of the Pacific Plate with the stationary Hawaiian mantle plume, a hotspot fixed deep within Earth's mantle that generates magma as the plate moves northwestward over it.[44] This process initiated the chain approximately 85 million years ago, with Kure representing the northernmost and oldest emergent feature still above sea level, dating to about 28 million years ago.[11] As the plate's movement carried the region away from the hotspot, volcanic activity ceased, marking the end of Kure's shield-building phase around that time.[45]The initial volcanic edifice was a basaltic shield volcano, similar to those forming the younger islands of the main Hawaiian archipelago, constructed through effusive eruptions of low-viscosity lava over roughly 1 million years.[46] Following this phase, the volcano underwent extensive erosion from wave action and fluvial processes while simultaneously subsiding due to isostatic adjustment, thermal cooling of the lithosphere, and flexural loading—processes that lowered the structure below sea level over tens of millions of years at rates of 0.02–0.03 mm per year.[45] Seismic profiling and drilling data from nearby Midway Atoll reveal a basaltic basement overlain by thick sequences of coral limestone, confirming Kure's origins in hotspot-related shield volcanism and subsequent subsidence.[45]As subsidence continued, coral larvae settled on the shallow submarineplatform, initiating reef growth that eventually formed the atoll's characteristic ring structure enclosing a central lagoon.[44]Coral accretion began in the early Miocene, around 23 million years ago, during periods of stable or falling sea levels, with the current configuration resulting from ongoing vertical growth keeping pace with subsidence and eustatic sea-level changes over the past 5–7 million years.[45] Recent findings from the 2023 E/V Nautilus expeditions in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands support the broader hotspot model by identifying pre-Hawaiian volcanic activity from earlier mantle plumes, providing context for the chain's extended geological history beyond Kure's formation.[47]In the age progression of the Hawaiian chain, Kure Atoll contrasts sharply with the active volcanoes of the Big Island (Hawaiʻi), which are less than 0.5 million years old and still building their shields, illustrating the full lifecycle from volcanism to atoll in a northwest-southeast gradient driven by plate motion at about 8–10 cm per year.[44]
Projected future changes
Kure Atoll is undergoing ongoing subsidence at a rate of approximately 0.1-0.2 mm per year, driven by the lingering effects of hotspot dynamics and the continued flexure of the oceanic lithosphere following its passage over the Hawaiian hotspot. This gradual sinking is characteristic of mature atolls in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands chain, where volcanic loading from ancient eruptions has long since dissipated, but isostatic adjustment persists.[48]When combined with projected global sea-level rise, this subsidence exacerbates the risk of partial submersion for Kure's low-lying islands and reef flats. Models indicate that under intermediate emissions scenarios, sea levels around the Hawaiian Islands could rise by 0.6 to 1.2 meters by 2100 relative to 1995-2014 levels, potentially leading to inundation of significant portions of Green Island and other emergent features by the late 21st or early 22nd century.[49] Beyond 2100, continued rise at rates of several millimeters per year could accelerate this process, threatening the atoll's structural integrity without natural or human interventions to enhance reef accretion.Coral reefs surrounding Kure Atoll may respond to these changes through adaptation, such as shifts in communitycomposition toward more resilient species, or vertical migration to deeper waters where light and temperature conditions allow. However, modeling for Hawaiian reefs predicts substantial habitat loss, with 70-90% of suitable coral environments potentially degraded or lost by 2050 under high-emissions pathways, and near-total loss by 2100, due to the atoll's limited upward growth capacity outpacing sea-level rise.[50] This vulnerability stems from the already marginal net accretion rates at Kure, which hover near zero and cannot compensate for accelerated environmental stressors.In the broader tectonic context, Kure Atoll continues to drift northwestward with the Pacific Plate at approximately 7-10 cm per year, further isolating it from the active Hawaiian hotspot and exposing it to evolving oceanographic influences over geological timescales. This motion reinforces the atoll's long-term trajectory toward deeper submersion as plate separation from formative volcanic sources increases.Projections for Kure remain uncertain due to limited site-specific modeling, with much of the available data derived from broader Hawaiian or Pacific atoll studies that have incorporated 2020s advancements in climate simulations, such as refined ice-sheet dynamics and regional ocean circulation effects from the 2022 Hawaii Sea Level Rise update. Enhanced monitoring and targeted geophysical surveys are needed to refine these forecasts.[49]
History
Early discovery and 19th century
Kure Atoll, the northernmost atoll in the Hawaiian chain, may have been visited by Native Hawaiians during pre-contact voyages across the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI), potentially for gathering marine resources such as seabirds, turtles, and seals, though no archaeological evidence confirms permanent settlement or regular use at Kure specifically, unlike closer islands such as Nihoa and Necker.[51] Oral traditions and navigational knowledge suggest Polynesian wayfinders reached remote atolls like Kure for seasonal exploitation, but historical records prior to European contact remain incomplete and lack direct attribution to Native perspectives.[52]The first documented European sighting of Kure Atoll occurred in 1823, when American captain Benjamin Morrell Jr. aboard the schoonerTartar approached the atoll during a whaling voyage and noted its abundant populations of green sea turtles and northern elephant seals, dubbing it Ocean Island.[53] Subsequent visits in the mid-19th century highlighted the atoll's navigational perils and resource potential; ships frequently grounded on its reefs, with crews surviving for months on local wildlife, underscoring Kure's isolation more than 1,200 miles northwest of the main Hawaiian Islands.[1]Guano deposits from seabird colonies were observed during these explorations, attracting interest under the U.S. Guano Islands Act of 1856, but the atoll's extreme remoteness deterred commercial mining despite a lease granted in 1894.[1]A notable incident illustrating these hazards was the grounding of the USS Saginaw on October 29, 1870, when the wooden side-wheel steamer struck an outer reef while en route from Midway Atoll to Honolulu, amid heavy swells and poor visibility.[54] The crew of 93, under Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Sicard, salvaged provisions and endured four months on the atoll, subsisting on seals, turtles, and birds until five volunteers departed in the captain's gig on December 18 for a perilous 1,500-mile open-boat voyage to Kauai; only coxswain John Andrews survived the 31-day ordeal to alert authorities, leading to a rescue expedition that evacuated the remaining survivors on January 4, 1871.[54] This event drew international attention to Kure's dangers and prompted improved charting efforts.In 1886, the Hawaiian Kingdom asserted formal possession of Kure Atoll when Special Commissioner James Boyd arrived aboard the schoonerWaialeale on September 20 and raised the kingdom's flag, establishing a depot of provisions for future shipwrecked mariners on behalf of King Kalakaua.[1] This claim preceded U.S. annexation, which incorporated Kure as part of the Hawaiian Islands via the Newlands Resolution on July 7, 1898, during the Spanish-American War, transforming the atoll into U.S. territory without immediate economic development.[55]
20th century developments
In 1909, President Theodore Roosevelt designated Kure Atoll as part of the Hawaiian Islands Bird Reservation through Executive Order No. 1019, establishing federal protection for its seabird populations under the U.S. Department of Agriculture to prevent exploitation for feathers and eggs.[56][57] This reservation encompassed the northwestern Hawaiian Islands from Nihoa to Kure, marking a shift toward conservation amid earlier threats from unregulated harvesting.[19]During the early 20th century, attempts to exploit Kure's guano deposits were limited despite leases granted under the Guano Islands Act; a 1894 lease extended into the 1910s but resulted in no mining activity, and it expired in 1919 without extraction due to logistical challenges and the atoll's remote location.[19][53] Following Hawaii's annexation in 1898, which included Kure under U.S. territory, these resource interests waned as conservation priorities grew.[58]World War II saw minor U.S. Navy involvement at Kure, with routine reconnaissance patrols originating from nearby Midway Atoll to monitor for potential Japanese use, but no permanent base or significant infrastructure was developed there.[59] Postwar, in 1960, the U.S. Coast Guard established a LORAN-C navigation station on Green Island, which operated until 1992 and supported trans-Pacific shipping and aviation signals; however, the presence of personnel and dogs led to disturbances of the local Hawaiian monk seal population, including harassment that displaced breeding females and contributed to an over 80% decline in beach counts since the 1960s.[60][61][62]Scientific research at Kure began in earnest during the 1920s with ornithological surveys as part of the Tanager Expedition (1923–1924), the first comprehensive Western scientific exploration of the northwestern Hawaiian Islands, which documented seabird colonies and laid foundational data on the atoll's avian biodiversity.[63][64] Post-World War II ecological studies remained sporadic until the mid-century, with limited documentation on broader habitats beyond birds, though efforts intensified in the 1970s through reports on the atoll's natural history that highlighted ongoing conservation needs.[19]
21st century conservation
In 2006, Kure Atoll was incorporated into the newly established Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument (PMNM) through Presidential Proclamation 8031, which protected approximately 140,000 square miles of ocean and islands in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, including this remote atoll as its northernmost extent. The monument's boundaries were significantly expanded in 2016 by Presidential Proclamation 9478, increasing the protected area to over 582,000 square miles and enhancing safeguards for marine ecosystems around Kure Atoll. PMNM is co-managed by four trustees: the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the State of Hawaiʻi, and the Office of Hawaiian Affairs, ensuring integrated oversight of conservation, cultural, and scientific priorities.[65]Restoration efforts at Kure Atoll have intensified in the 21st century, focusing on recovering key species and habitats within PMNM. The Hawaiian monk seal (Neomonachus schauinslandi) recovery program, led by NOAA Fisheries, includes annual population assessments and interventions such as pup rehabilitation and hook removal to mitigate fishery interactions, contributing to a gradual population increase observed at the atoll since the early 2000s.[66]Invasive species management has been a cornerstone, building on the successful eradication of Polynesian rats (Rattus exulans) from Green Island in 1995; 21st-century initiatives emphasize ongoing removal of non-native plants like Verbesina encelioides and Nicotiana glauca, alongside revegetation with native species such as Sida fallax to restore seabird habitats.[26] These efforts are supported by the Kure Atoll State Wildlife Sanctuary, where state-led teams conduct regular monitoring and control measures.Research expeditions to Kure Atoll occur annually as part of PMNM's monitoring framework, with small teams deploying for 2–6 months to track biodiversity, including seabird nesting and coral health, often aboard vessels like the NOAA ship Hiʻialakai.[67] These activities increasingly integrate Native Hawaiian knowledge, as outlined in the 2021 guidance document Mai Ka Pō Mai, which incorporates traditional ecological practices and the atoll's cultural name, Hōlanikū, to inform stewardship and emphasize its role in ancestral voyaging narratives.[68] In 2010, PMNM, encompassing Kure Atoll, was inscribed as a UNESCOWorld Heritage Site for its natural and cultural significance, and in 2025, the marine portions were designated as Papahānaumokuākea National Marine Sanctuary effective March 3, providing enhanced regulatory protections under the National Marine Sanctuaries Act.[69][70] Access to the atoll remains strictly limited to permitted personnel, with challenges including logistical isolation and the need for updated protocols to protect emerging cultural sites amid climate pressures.[71]
Human activities
Navigational and military installations
In 1960, the United States Coast Guard constructed a LORAN-C navigational station on Green Island at Kure Atoll to provide long-range hyperbolic radio navigation signals for maritime and aviation traffic in the central Pacific.[72] The facility, commissioned in March 1961, operated as a secondary station in the Hawaiian and later Central Pacific LORAN chains, supporting precise positioning until its obsolescence with the advent of GPS technology.[72] It housed approximately 20 personnel, including officers and enlisted members, who maintained the 625-foot radio tower, transmitter buildings, and associated equipment.[61]As part of the LORAN infrastructure, a 4,000-foot coral runway was built on the southwest end of Green Island in 1960 to facilitate supply flights and emergency landings for the station.[59] The airstrip, oriented northeast-southwest, supported sporadic operations, including C-121 and Boeing 707 emergency landings in the 1960s and a C-130 in the late 1970s, but saw limited use beyond logistical needs for the Coast Guard.[59] It remained available primarily as an emergency facility until the station's closure.[59]Kure Atoll's military significance was limited during World War II, with no permanent bases established; instead, U.S. Navy patrols from nearby Midway Atoll conducted routine reconnaissance flights and submarine visits to monitor for potential Japanese occupation.[59] These operations included aerial surveys, as evidenced by two F4U Corsair fighter losses on August 1, 1944, when aircraft crashed south of the atoll during patrols, though without fatalities.[73] Postwar, the atoll saw no sustained military presence beyond the navigational installations.The LORAN station was decommissioned on July 2, 1992, with the antenna tower removed shortly thereafter, and control of the site returned to the State of Hawaii in 1993 for management as a wildlife sanctuary.[72] Most structures, including buildings and the pier, were partially dismantled post-decommissioning to reduce environmental impact, though remnants like the runway and an unlined landfill persist.[12] The site is monitored for contaminants, particularly polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) from buried electrical transformers and capacitors used in the 1960s, with ongoing remediation efforts addressing soil and debris pollution to protect the atoll's ecosystem.[28][74]
Scientific research and expeditions
Scientific research at Kure Atoll has primarily focused on ornithological monitoring, marine habitat assessment, and conservation efforts to protect its unique ecosystems within the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument. Ornithological surveys began in 1923 with early population assessments of breeding seabirds, such as albatrosses, revealing initial colony sizes of around 365 pairs that declined to 70 pairs by 1958 due to factors like habitat disturbance and predation.[75] These efforts, coordinated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR), have included regular bird banding programs to track migration and demographics; for instance, over 1,000 Christmas shearwaters were banded on the atoll between 1964 and 2013 to study survival rates and breeding success.[76] Since 1994, DLNR's Division of Forestry and Wildlife (DOFAW) has maintained annual field camps on Green Island for seabird censuses, monitoring 18 species that collectively number over 100,000 individuals, with a focus on species like the Laysan albatross vulnerable to longline fisheries.[77][26]Marine expeditions have advanced understanding of Kure's submerged features through systematic mapping and exploration. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) initiated coral reef assessments in 2000 via the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Reef Assessment and Monitoring Program (NOWRAMP), which surveyed benthic habitats around the atoll using towed-diver methods and satellite imagery to classify reef ecosystems covering approximately 13,000 km² across the region.[78][79] These efforts produced detailed georeferenced maps identifying dominant coral cover and algal communities, informing management against bleaching and invasive species.[80] In 2023, the Ocean Exploration Trust's E/V Nautilus conducted remotely operated vehicle (ROV) dives during the Ala ʻAumoana Kai Uli expedition (NA154), exploring deep-sea habitats near Kure Atoll and documenting diverse sponge communities and submerged geological features at depths up to 3,000 meters over 12 dives totaling more than 264 hours.[81][82] In April 2025, NOAA's Okeanos Explorer conducted ROV and mapping operations during the Papahānaumokuākea expedition, exploring an unnamed seamount northwest of Kure Atoll to document deep-sea habitats and geological features.[83]Conservation missions emphasize habitat restoration and species protection under monument protocols. Annual marine debris removal operations, led by NOAA's Marine Debris Program and partners like the Kure Atoll Conservancy, target derelict fishing gear that entangles wildlife; a 2021 mission at Hōlanikū (Kure Atoll) recovered significant netting from reefs, while 2023 efforts across the monument removed 106 tons in 90 days, including from Kure's shorelines.[84][85] In 2024, these efforts achieved a record removal of nearly 300,000 pounds of debris from the monument, with ongoing missions in 2025 continuing to address pollution at sites including Kure.[20][86] Hawaiian monk seal monitoring, ongoing since the 1980s through NOAA Fisheries' standardized program, involves pup counts, health assessments, and entanglement disentanglements at Kure, where the population has been tracked for over 40 years to address threats like low pup survival rates.[87][88] These missions integrate with broader monument frameworks to mitigate climate impacts, such as rising sea levels affecting seal haul-outs.[89]In January 2025, NOAA designated Papahānaumokuākea as a National Marine Sanctuary, effective March 3, 2025, enhancing protections and coordination for research and conservation activities at Kure Atoll through additional federal oversight.[70]Access for scientific expeditions is strictly regulated to minimize disturbance, requiring permits from the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument co-managers, including NOAA, USFWS, and DLNR.[89] Logistics typically involve boat voyages from Honolulu, Hawaii—lasting several days—or chartered flights via Midway Atoll, with teams limited to 5-10 individuals to adhere to sanctuary protocols and support small field camps.[90] All activities, from banding to ROV operations, must obtain specific authorizations, ensuring compliance with environmental safeguards.[91]
Amateur radio operations
Amateur radio operations at Kure Atoll, a remote and protected wildlife refuge, are rare events conducted under strict permits to minimize environmental disturbance. These DXpeditions—temporary activations by hobbyist operators—primarily occur during brief windows when access is granted, allowing global contacts that are highly sought after by enthusiasts pursuing confirmations for the rare DXCC entity status of Kure (KH7).[92]During the U.S. Coast Guard's LORAN station operation from 1960 to 1992, amateur radio activities were more frequent, with stationed personnel using the call sign KH6EDY to make contacts across 126 countries over extended periods, such as one operator's year-long tour.[93] These informal operations capitalized on the atoll's isolation during the navigational era but ceased with the station's closure in 1992.[72]In the 2000s, a significant DXpedition took place in September-October 2005 under the special call sign K7C, organized by Cordell Expeditions with an international team of 12 operators from the United States, Canada, and Germany.[94] The group operated for approximately two weeks, establishing four stations and using innovative satellite-internet for real-time logging, while also supporting wildlife monitoring as part of the multi-disciplinary effort.[94] The KH7K prefix remains the standard designation for Kure activations, reflecting its Hawaii entity status on the DXCC list.[92]The primary purpose of these expeditions is to facilitate worldwide amateur radio communications, enabling operators to log and confirm rare-location QSLs that contribute to DXCC awards and global propagation studies.[92] Contacts from Kure are prized due to the atoll's remote position, which offers unique propagation paths, particularly challenging over the North Polar region to Europe.[95]Logistical challenges are substantial, including an eight-day sea voyage from Honolulu covering over 2,200 km, dependence on weather conditions for safe landing, and reliance on portable generators or solar systems for power in the off-grid environment.[94][12] Operations are limited to short durations of 1-2 weeks to adhere to conservation permits, with access primarily by boat and occasional use of the existing airstrip for support.[96]No major DXpeditions have occurred since 2005, as later applications—such as the Pacific Island DXpedition Group's fourth attempt in 2018—were denied citing risks to ecological integrity and scheduling conflicts with refuge management.[95][96]
Notable incidents
Shipwrecks
Kure Atoll's remote location and surrounding hazardous reefs have led to numerous shipwrecks since the early 19th century, underscoring the dangers of navigation in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.[1] The atoll's coral barriers, combined with unpredictable currents and storms, have claimed vessels involved in whaling, naval operations, and fishing, with crews often resorting to building makeshift boats for survival.[97]One of the most significant wrecks is that of the USS Saginaw, a side-wheel steamer launched in 1859 as the first U.S. Navy vessel built on the West Coast.[98] On October 29, 1870, while en route from Midway Atoll to Honolulu and intending to check for castaways, the ship struck the reef at Kure Atoll amid heavy swells at 3:15 a.m., breaking apart rapidly.[54] The 93-man crew reached Green Island safely but endured 68 days of hardship with limited rations and water; five volunteers then sailed 1,200 miles in a 22-foot gig to Kauai, arriving after 31 days with only one survivor, coxswain William Halford.[98] The remaining crew was rescued on January 3, 1871, by the schooner Kona and the royal steamer Kilauea.[54] The wreck was rediscovered in 2003 during a NOAA maritime heritage survey, revealing artifacts such as cannons, anchors, paddlewheel shafts, a ship's bell (recovered in 2008), Parrott guns, and steam engine components, highlighting its role in 19th-century Pacific exploration.[97]Earlier whaling shipwrecks also mark the atoll's perilous history. The British whaler Gledstanes struck the northern reef on June 9, 1837, at 11:30 p.m., becoming the first documented vessel lost there.[99] The crew launched boats, landed on Green Island, salvaged provisions, and constructed a 38-foot vessel called Deliverance from the wreckage over three months; Captain J.R. Brown and nine crew reached Honolulu in November 1837, while the rest were rescued later by British authorities.[99] Artifacts from the site, surveyed and documented in 2008, include four large anchors, a small cannon, iron ballast bars, copper fasteners, and a try pot with tryworks remnants, spanning a 70-meter area at 2-7 meters depth.[100] Similarly, the New Bedford whaler Parker was lost on September 24, 1842, when a fierce storm caused seas to crash through the cabin windows at 2:00 a.m., wrecking the ship on the reef.[101] The crew survived on the atoll, building a boat for rescue; most were saved on April 16, 1843, with the remainder evacuated shortly after.[102] The site was identified in 2002, preserving wooden hull remnants and whaling gear as evidence of the era's maritime commerce.[97]The British iron-hulled ship Dunnottar Castle, a three-masted vessel built in Glasgow in 1874, wrecked on July 15, 1886, after a faulty chronometer caused navigational error, leading it to strike the reef while carrying coal from Sydney to Wilmington, California.[103] The 28-man crew endured privations; the chief officer and six seamen sailed to Kauai in 52 days, while the majority were rescued by the Birnam Wood and taken to Valparaiso, Chile.[103] This incident prompted the Kingdom of Hawaii to establish a lifesaving station at Kure Atoll.[104] NOAA surveys beginning in 2006 documented the site, including anchors and hull fragments, representing late-19th-century commercial sail.[105]In addition to these whalers, various fishing vessels wrecked at Kure Atoll before 1950, contributing to approximately 10 documented incidents overall, including the sailing vessel Ocean Pearl in 1888.[106] Due to the atoll's isolation, salvage efforts have been minimal, with most wreckage left in place; scattered debris continues to pose entanglement risks to marine life and navigation hazards.[97] These sites hold cultural and historical value as archaeological resources, protected within the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument since 2006, preserving insights into maritime adaptation and Pacific trade.[1] Comprehensive documentation through NOAA-led surveys in the 2000s, including magnetometer mapping and artifact recovery, has advanced underwater archaeology without disturbance, emphasizing non-invasive preservation.[100]
Recent weather events
In 2018, Hurricane Walaka, a Category 5 storm, passed through the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, causing significant coastal erosion and damage to low-lying habitats across the region.[107] The hurricane's high winds and waves led to the redistribution of derelict fishing gear and other debris onto beaches in the chain, complicating habitat restoration efforts for native species.[108]Storms in 2024 and 2025 further highlighted Kure Atoll's vulnerability to tropical systems. Hurricane Hone in August 2024 prompted a tropical storm watch for the atoll, delivering approximately 1.5 inches of rain to Hōlanikū (Kure's main island) and generating gusty winds, though no severe structural damage was reported.[109] In late July 2025, a tsunami generated by a Russian earthquake reached Kure and nearby Midway Atoll, producing wave run-up that tested emergency preparedness protocols; native vegetation and robust dunes buffered much of the impact, preventing major infrastructure loss while causing minor dune breaches and an influx of coastal debris.[110][111]These events disrupted wildlife, particularly nesting activities for seabirds like Laysan albatrosses and Hawaiian monk seals, with temporary displacement from beachfront habitats due to surging waters and debris.[112] Kure Atoll Conservancy field reports stressed rapid restoration measures, including debris clearance and habitat monitoring, to mitigate long-term effects on breeding populations.[111]Post-2020 advances in monitoring, such as satellite imagery and unmanned aerial systems (drones), have enhanced post-event assessments at Kure, enabling better prediction of erosion patterns and wildlife recovery.[113] These tools were instrumental in evaluating the 2025 tsunami's limited but notable impacts, informing resilience strategies for the atoll's conservation.[114]