Rare bird collection at risk
WOEFUL: WORK TO PRESERVE COLOMBIA’S BIRDS TAKES PLACE IN RUN-DOWN PUBLIC BUILDING
Lack of funding poses a problem for dedicated biologist.
Under a cracked and leaky ceiling, Andres Cuervo works on a colourful, dead hummingbird for the ornithological collection of the National University of Colombia, the country with more bird species than any other.
Condors, eagles and even extinct birds receive a “second life” at the table of the biologist who preserves them for science and posterity.
But rather than a pristine setting with regulated temperature and moisture levels, the valuable collection of some 44 000 stuffed birds is housed in metal pull-out drawers in a dilapidated public building.
And in January, a heavy downpour over Bogota put Cuervo’s collection at risk.
The water “fell in cascades on these cabinets”, he recalls, pointing, clearly still distressed, at nearly losing his “irreplaceable” avian stockpile.
One drawer contains hundreds of blue-and-green hummingbirds each no larger than a bumblebee.
From another, Cuervo pulls a huge harpy eagle with a wingspan of over two metres.
There are also several specimens of a bird that went extinct in the 1970s.
His colleague, Gary Stiles, says: “We got out the buckets, the plastic [sheets], anything to protect the collection.”
Stiles is a pre-eminent American ornithologist who has worked in Colombia since 1990 and discovered several new species.
Fortunately, the damage was limited to the tails of a handful of birds and the labels that identified them.
“It is ironic that with the most diverse avifauna [on the planet] we have one of the most endangered collections,” says Stiles of conditions at the Institute of Natural Sciences, where the ornithological collection is housed.
With about 2 000 different species – a fifth of the global total and 82 of them endemic – Colombia is known as “the country of birds”, according to the WWF [World Wide Fund for Nature].
“It is partly due to the topography,” explains Stiles.
“Only in Colombia do the Andes divide into three distinct high mountain ranges, separated by deep valleys that form natural barriers.
“This facilitates the isolation of populations and the formation of diverse species.”
But this natural wealth contrasts with the economic difficulties faced by public universities in Latin America’s fourth-biggest economy.
Successive rectors of the National University have decried a lack of financing.
According to research by the institution, the country’s 33 public universities have a shortfall of about 18 billion pesos (about R89 million). State funding has been cut almost by half from 1994.
The shortfall is evident in the corridors of the institute.
In August 2023, a 6.1-magnitude earthquake shook the capital and “magnified some cracks” in the walls, recalls Cuervo.
A classroom had to be shuttered due to a risk of collapse.
“I go home every day thinking about this collection... the accumulation of small incidents can lead to something quite serious,” he adds.
The birds at the institute are not on display and only leave the metal cabinets to be studied.
“They are unique and irreplaceable because they were collected in different places at different times. They represent the geographical history of the country,” says Cuervo of his life’s work.
Each specimen has a label with its place and date of collection. The oldest dates from 1914, its colours still intact.
Thanks to the collection, researchers have been able to study how warm-weather species have colonised new territories as global temperatures rise due to climate change.
They can also see how savanna and grassland birds have thrived even as forest species have declined as their habitat has been destroyed for farming or construction.
“As a society, we can use [the information gathered] to solve problems that have to do with biodiversity,” adds Cuervo before starting work on a new hummingbird.
He makes an incision in the tiny chest to separate the bird’s skin from the flesh. He then stuffs the skin with cotton and places it in a small cardboard oven that works only with light bulbs to prevent any degradation.
Humidity and light are the main threats to his stuffed birds.
“Colours, proportions and plumage are preserved over time. It’s almost like immortalising an individual,” Cuervo says proudly of his work. –