Newborn Hawaiian monk seal to be moved out of Waikiki
HONOLULU — State and federal authorities plan to move a newborn Hawaiian monk seal away from congested Waikiki so it can remain a wild animal and won’t become accustomed to interacting with people.
Officials will take the seal shortly after it is weaned to a remote, undisclosed part of Oahu island, David Schofield, the regional marine mammal response co-ordinator for the National Marine Fisheries Service, said Tuesday.
Officials have moved newly weaned seals from other areas popular with people in the past, like Poipu on Kauai, Schofield said. The aim is to allow the seal to grow up with other seals instead of playing with and mimicking humans. There’s also a risk people may feed the young seals, even by accident.
“We want the seal to learn to be a seal, not to be a pet,” Schofield said.


