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Will We Soon See Another Wave of Bird Extinctions in the Americas?

By Alexander Lees and Jacob Socolar
From the Summer 2016 issue of Living Bird magazine.
Species lost in the 20th century in North America—Ivory-billed Woodpecker, Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, and Bachman’s Warbler. Photo courtesy of Cornell University Museum of Vertebrates
Species lost in the 20th century in North America—Ivory-billed Woodpecker, Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, and Bachman’s Warbler. Photo courtesy of Cornell University Museum of Vertebrates.

In the shady recesses of unassuming forest patches in eastern Brazil, bird species are taking their final bows on the global evolutionary stage, and winking out.

These are obscure birds with quaint names: Alagoas Foliage-gleaner, Pernambuco Pygmy-Owl, Cryptic Treehunter. But their disappearance portends a turning point in a global biodiversity crisis.

Bird extinctions are nothing new. Human activity has already wiped out over a thousand species, mostly on oceanic islands. Today, although island species are still threatened, we are witnessing a historic shift toward the endangerment of continental species of birds.

This new wave of threats, driven primarily by habitat loss, is deeply troubling because South American forests are home to rich bird diversity, yet our conservation strategies are still a work in progress.  

The Trouble With the Tropics

To appreciate the significance of today’s looming extinctions in the tropics, we must travel north to the great deciduous forests of the eastern United States, which are haunted by the ghosts of extinctions past. Here, the opportunity to experience the double raps of Ivory-billed Woodpeckers, sun-obscuring clouds of Passenger Pigeons, raucous flocks of Carolina Parakeets, and the monotone song of the Bachman’s Warbler is seemingly forever lost. Deforestation is to blame for these infamous four extinctions. Given the incredible loss of old-growth forest in the 20th century, perhaps the most noteworthy feature of this extinction episode is that it did not involve more species.

The European experience was even more striking. The clearing of Europe’s primeval forests apparently did not cause a single bird extinction. The logical conclusion is that it is very difficult to drive continental birds extinct.

Why then are forest birds beginning to go extinct in South America, home of the largest tropical forests on Earth? There are two unsettling conclusions. The first is that forest destruction, particularly in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, has reached continental-scale proportions, with almost no nook or cranny spared. And the second is that it may not be nearly as difficult to drive birds extinct in the tropics and subtropics as in the temperate zone.

Biologists Stuart Pimm and Robert Askins have argued that the eastern United States witnessed few avian extinctions simply because most of its birds have very large geographic ranges. In South America, the situation is dramatically different.

An aerial shot illustrates the contrast between forest and agricultural landscapes in Brazil. Photo by Kate Evans for Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
An aerial shot illustrates the contrast between forest and agricultural landscapes in Brazil. Photo by Kate Evans for Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR).

South America is the evolutionary cradle and current champion of global bird biodiversity with 3,368 bird species—around one-third of all the world’s birds. Many of these species have small ranges, restricted to particular countries or even to particular mountains or forest types.

Unique features of the life history of tropical birds led to an overly rosy assessment of their future. Author and academic Bjorn Lomborg, for example, claimed that the lack of extinctions following the destruction of Brazil’s Atlantic Forest showed that the biodiversity crisis is overblown.

But extinctions may lag far behind forest loss, a phenomenon known as the “extinction debt” which may be paid over hundreds of years.

Tropical birds typically live for longer than their temperate counterparts. Thus, the last pairs of rare species may make their last stand in their fragmented forest redoubts for decades. Indeed, several species have paid this price, and more may already be committed to extinction.  

The Need to Develop Strategies

The situation in northeast Brazil is particularly dire.

The last known Alagoas Foliage-gleaner photographed in Pernambuco, Brazil, in November 2011. Photo by Ciro Albano/NE Brazil Birding.
The last known Alagoas Foliage-gleaner photographed in Pernambuco, Brazil, in November 2011. Photo by Ciro Albano/NE Brazil Birding.

A few dozen Alagoas Antwrens cling to survival in fewer than six tiny forest patches. The Alagoas Foliage-gleaner, presented to science along with the antwren for the first time in the 1980s, is known from only two patches and was last photographed in November 2011. We can only guess how many more species will be lost from this region where new species are discovered and others are disappearing on a near-annual basis.

But what of Amazonia, the last great tropical forest wilderness and bastion of tropical biodiversity? Although deforestation rates have fallen since 2004, there are still grounds for concern. Pressure on existing protected areas from dam-building and mining interests is increasing, and the existing reserve network poorly protects the hardest-hit regions.

Furthermore, Amazonia is divided into different biogeographic regions known as “areas of endemism” that each contain species found nowhere else. Even today, taxonomists continue to recognize new divisions in Amazonian birds, often elevating former subspecies to species status. The Belem Curassow was recently recognized as a species that occurs only in the most deforested part of the Amazon. Its last documented record in the wild was over 35 years ago.

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Unless a population is discovered, this species may be the first recorded Amazonian bird extinction. Hot on its heels is the Iquitos Gnatcatcher, known only from a tiny and heavily deforested area of unique stunted forest in Peru. Only six pairs are known, and the bird has proven harder to find every year.

Some of these species need immediate and drastic conservation interventions, but their plight seems to be largely ignored by governments and international environmental groups. Restoring forest around these last fragments is crucial for long-term population viability.

However, for some species captive breeding with an eye to future reintroduction may be the only way forward. Such measures have already saved the Spix’s Macaw and Alagoas Curassow from global extinction–populations of these species exist only in captivity. However, while we have centuries of experience breeding parrots and game birds, we know far less about breeding small songbirds.

In fact, most of what we know about managing songbird populations comes from islands, and it is unclear how well this knowledge will translate to the mainland. Island species are adapted to maintain small populations and may be better able to recover from genetic bottlenecks. And, quick fixes such as controlling invasive predators have helped to restore populations. But mainland birds face a different suite of threats, dominated by habitat loss.

Clearly, we must not assume that tropical forest birds will prove as resilient to human activity as their temperate brethren. Though the situation is critical, we also see grounds for optimism.

In Peru, for instance, new endangered species legislation has convened a working group to develop a conservation strategy for the Iquitos Gnatcatcher. In the meantime, a small reserve has been created that protects the few remaining territories. Across the border in Brazil exciting plans are being drawn up to reintroduce the Alagoas Curassow back into the wild.

There is an immediate need to support and expand such actions. The next five to ten years will be critical for many species of South American birds teetering on the brink of extinction.

Alexander Lees is a postdoctoral fellow at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Jacob Socolar is a Ph.D. candidate at Princeton University. This essay originally appeared on theconversation.com.

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