May 22, 2026
MEDIA CONTACT:
Stryker Weiner & Yokota Public Relations, Inc.
Kryslyn Hashimoto
Bishop Museum Announces
Science & Sustainability Festival 2026
This year’s event focuses on Makahiki Kuleana Kahakai: The Year of Our Coastal Kuleana
Honolulu, Hawaiʻi — Bishop Museum, the State of Hawai‘i Museum of Natural and Cultural History, announces its annual Science & Sustainability Festival on Saturday, May 30, 2026, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. This year’s Festival places special focus on Makahiki Kuleana Kahakai: The Year of Our Coastal Kuleana, and also hosts the Museum’s 2026 symposium, Mālama Maʻawe Iho: Fibers in Focus.
The Science & Sustainability Festival, a Bishop Museum Signature Public Program, features interactive activities for all members of the ʻohana (family), along with special presentations and exhibition highlights. Guests can learn directly from scientists, cultural practitioners, and community organizers on the frontlines of biodiversity research and conservation efforts across the Hawaiian Islands.
Image: Celebrate Micronesia Festival 2025.
Highlights of the campuswide event include:
- $5.00 online registration for kamaʻāina and military with ID
- The opportunity to meet and engage with Bishop Museum researchers and view animal and plant specimens from the Museum’s collections
- More than 40 community partner booths including federal, state, and city agencies, as well as local conservation and sustainability groups
- Access to all of Bishop Museum’s exhibitions and galleries, including Aloha Bricks ’26: Stories of Hawai‘i and Ea Mai ‘Eiwa: Patterns of Practice
- The debut of two new additions to the Science Adventure Center, including a Marine Invasive Species display and Cave Arthropod lava tube exhibit (both on the first floor)
- Watumull Planetarium shows
- Special programming
“We’re honored to welcome our partners and neighbors to the Science & Sustainability Festival, an annual event where science, culture, and community action unite to protect the unique biodiversity of ko Hawaiʻi pae ʻāina (‘the Hawaiian archipelago’),” said Taylour Chang, Bishop Museum director of public programs and community engagement. “This year’s Festival theme is especially poignant as we address how we can protect our coastal ecosystems and communities in light of climate change and the impactful storms we’ve experienced in recent months.”
Makahiki Kuleana Kahakai: The Year of Our Coastal Kuleana
Hawaiʻi has more than 1,000 miles of tidal coastline with an incredible variety of habitats, including wetlands, dunes, beaches, tidepools, nearshore ocean waters, coral reefs, and offshore islets. These habitats are rich with life, from plants and limu (seaweed) to coastal birds, insects, fish, and coral.
As island communities, we are stewards of our shores, helping ensure our coastlines are clean, that we recreate responsibly, and that our coastal ecosystems and species can be sustained into the future. Makahiki Kuleana Kahakai: the Year of Our Coastal Kuleana celebrates our deep connections with and kuleana (responsibility) towards our tidal coastlines.
Related programming at the Science & Sustainability Festival:
- 10:30 a.m., Great Lawn Stage | Coastal Kuleana: Storms & Climate Change Impacts on Coastal Environments and Communities. Organized in collaboration with the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR), this panel will include Leah Laramee (Hawai‘i Climate Change Mitigation & Adaptation Commission), Carlos Mozo (Lāhui Foundation), Jordan Lerma (Division of Aquatic Resources), Administrator James Barros (Hawaiʻi Emergency Management Agency), and moderator Joshua Atwood (Department of Land and Natural Resources).
- 12:30 p.m., Great Lawn Stage | Coastal Kuleana: Threats to Coastal Birds. Organized in collaboration with the DNLR, this presentation discusses the most pressing threats and predators facing our coastal birds and wildlife — from the impacts of light pollution on seabird fallout. to reigniting hope for our ʻalae ʻula (Hawaiian moorhen) with only 700 remaining.
Bishop Museum 2026 Symposium | Mālama Maʻawe Iho: Fibers in Focus
Organized in partnership with Arizona State University and University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, Bishop Museum’s annual symposium celebrates the natural fibers of Hawaiʻi.
During the Science & Sustainability Festival, the public sessions of the Symposium will focus on three species: niu (Cocos nucifera), olonā (Touchardia latifolia), and hau (Talipariti tiliaceum). Found in different parts of Hawaiʻi’s landscape, these plants play pivotal roles in conservation efforts for diverse ecosystems. They are also culturally significant, both in the past and in the present. This program shares a deeper understanding of the human and plant kinship, and the impacts these plants have in knowledge systems throughout Hawaiʻi.
- 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. in the Atherton Hālau
City Nature Challenge Social
The City Nature Challenge (CNC) is an annual event where cities around the world compete to document biodiversity on iNaturalist to bring communities together to celebrate and learn about nature, capture a yearly ‘snapshot’ of biodiversity, and promote community science.
Following this year’s CNC on O‘ahu, Bishop Museum will host a social gathering for CNC participants, nature nerds, and anyone who wants to learn more about biodiversity, to connect in person and share stories over food, drink, fun activities, and a special presentation.
- 3-5 p.m. in the Gulab & Indru Watumull Atrium, Hawaiian Hall Complex
A full list of community partners participanting in the Science & Sustainability Festival can be found below. For more information including a full schedule of activities and presentations, and to purchase tickets, please visit BishopMuseum.org/SSF26.
Mahalo nui loa to the Atherton Family Foundation for their generous support of this year’s Science & Sustainability Festival.
Science & Sustainability 2026 Community Partners
Aloha Tree Alliance
American Bird Conservancy
Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle Response
Conservation Council for Hawaiʻi
Conservation Dogs of Hawaiʻi
DLNR Division of Aquatic Resources
DLNR Division of Forestry and Wildlife
DLNR Division of State Parks, Lēʻahi | Diamond Head State Monument
Friends of Hawaiian Islands National Wildlife Refuge
Hawaiʻi Audubon Society
Hawaiʻi Electric Vehicle Association
Hawaiʻi Energy
Hawaiʻi Nature Center
Hawaiʻi State Climate Commission
Hawaiʻi State Energy Office
Hawaiʻi Wildfire Management Organization
Hawaiʻi Wildlife Center
Honolulu Board of Water Supply
Honua Scholars
HPU Center for Marine Debris Research
Ka Lāhui Hawaiʻi and Oʻahu Water Protectors
Ka Poʻe Lawaiʻa
Kauaʻi Forest Bird Recovery Project
Know Your Rights
Koʻolau Mountains Watershed Partnership
Lyon Arboretum
Mālama Kai Foundation
Mālama Maunalua
Moanalua Gardens Foundation
NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
Oʻahu Invasive Species Committee
Oʻahu Plant Extinction Prevention Program
Ocean Music Action
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System
Papahānaumokuākea Marine Debris Project
Pop-Up Lab for STEM
Punahou School, Climate Future Forum
Storm Water Hawaiʻi
Sustainable Coastlines Hawaiʻi
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Worm Lab
University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program
Waiʻanae Mountains Watershed Partnership
Western Pacific Fishery Management Council
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About Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, the State of Hawai‘i Museum of Natural and Cultural History:
Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum’s mission is to inspire our community and visitors through the exploration, celebration, and perpetuation of the extraordinary history, culture, and environment of Hawaiʻi and the Pacific. The Museum was founded in 1889 by Charles Reed Bishop in memory of his wife Bernice Pauahi Bishop, a royal descendant of King Kamehameha I. Today, the Museum thrives as an educational center for the community and is widely regarded as the world’s premier institution for Hawaiian and Pacific content.
Bishop Museum’s vast collections of more than 25 million objects and specimens represent nine disciplines and include more than 22 million biological specimens, over 2 million cultural objects, 115,000 historical publications, and 1 million photographs, films, works of art, audio recordings, and manuscripts. These collections tell the stories of the cultures and biodiversity of Hawaiʻi and the Pacific as well as the proud legacy of scholarly research spanning 130 years.
Bishop Museum proudly serves more than 200,000 visitors each year, including 20,000 children on school visits. Guests are encouraged to pre-plan their trip to #HawaiisMuseum with its free digital guide, available through Bloomberg Connects.
To learn more about the Museum’s research, collections, exhibits, and programs, visit BishopMuseum.org, follow @BishopMuseum on Facebook and Instagram, visit Bishop Museum’s YouTube channel, or call (808) 847-3511. Bishop Museum is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.
Bishop Museum is proud to be an Equal Employment Opportunity and Affirmative Action Employer, and welcomes applicants from the military, veterans, and those with disabilities. Learn about careers at Bishop Museum at BishopMuseum.org/Careers and on its LinkedIn page.
Bishop Museum Press is Hawai‘i’s oldest book publisher and one of the first scholarly publishers in the Western Hemisphere, and has published over 1,200 titles and distributed over 1 million books in 72 countries worldwide. Bishop Museum hosts a restaurant and gift shop on campus, Tūtū’s Place by Highway Inn and Shop Pacifica by Nā Mea Hawai‘i.
Past news releases can be viewed and downloaded at BishopMuseum.org/NewsRoom.