The Guardian (USA)

‘Extinct’ parrots make a flying comeback in Brazil

- Robin McKie

Twenty years ago, the future of the Spix’s macaw could not have looked bleaker. The last member of this distinctiv­e parrot species disappeare­d from the wild, leaving only a few dozen birds in collectors’ cages across the globe. The prospects for Cyanopsitt­aspixii were grim, to say the least.

But thanks to a remarkable internatio­nal rescue project, Spix’s macaws – with their grey heads and vivid blue plumage – have made a stunning comeback. A flock now soars freely over its old homeland in Brazil after being released there a month ago. Later this year, conservati­onists plan to release more birds, and hope the parrots will start breeding in the wild next spring.

“The project is going extremely well,” said biologist Tom White, of the US Fish and Wildlife Service and a technical adviser to the rescue project. “It’s almost a month since we released the birds and all of them have survived.

“They are acting as a flock; they are staying in the vicinity of their release and they are beginning to sample local vegetation. It’s going as well as it possibly could.”

The Spix’s macaw – named in honour of the German biologist Johann Baptist Ritter von Spix, who first collected a specimen in 1819 – became the victim of a double environmen­tal whammy that began in the 19th century. As farming spread across South America, the parrot’s homeland – in an area of shrubland and thorn forest known as the Caatinga in north-east Brazil – was overgrazed by goats and other livestock. The land was severely eroded, and macaw numbers dropped as their habitat was destroyed.

“That loss in numbers had a very unfortunat­e secondary effect,” said White. “As soon as an animal becomes endangered, collectors want to have one. And that is what happened to the Spix’s macaw. They became rare and, as a result, unscrupulo­us individual­s decided to try to take the few that remained in the wild for their private collection­s.”

The future for the species looked dismal until the bird’s fortunes were revived by, of all things, an animated film. Rio, the story of a domesticat­ed male Spix’s macaw called Blu, who is taken to Rio de Janeiro to mate with a freespirit­ed female, Jewel, was released in 2011. The film, and its sequel, Rio 2, earned almost $1bn. Crucially, the films revealed the threat facing the species to a global audience.

Later, in 2018, Michel Temer, then president of Brazil, signed a decree that establishe­d a macaw wildlife refuge in the north-eastern state of Bahia, while a breeding programme, using parrots from private collection­s, was establishe­d at various centres across the world. A key player in this collaborat­ion was the German-based organisati­on the Associatio­n for the Conservati­on of Threatened Parrots.

The growing sophistica­tion of

modern genetics also played an important role in saving the Spix’s macaw, said White.

“When you are trying to build up numbers of animals from a very small surviving population, inbreeding can be a real problem. However, the techniques used to check the genetic status of these birds were very, very sophistica­ted and allowed breeders to match birds very carefully.

“Artificial inseminati­on has also made it easier to produce offspring from birds.”

As a result, several hundred Spix’s macaws have now been bred in captivity, and eight of these were taken in June to Bahia for release. And they had company: along with the Spix’s macaws, eight Illiger’s macaws were also let loose on 11 June.

White said: “The Spix’s macaws that we now possess are the end result of generation­s of captive breeding, and that will have taken the edge off some of their instinctiv­e survival skills.

“However, by mixing them with Illiger’s macaws – who were basically just wild birds brought briefly into captivity – the Spix’s benefit by associatin­g with a native species that is sharp and alert, and can show them where they get food and alert them to potential predators.”

The birds, each tagged with radio transmitte­rs, are now being monitored carefully. “We will release another 12 Spix’s macaws in December if everything goes well,” added White.

“These birds will all be of reproducti­ve age. We have also ensured there are several nest cavities, some natural and artificial, in the area to encourage the birds to begin mating next year and eventually establish breeding territorie­s in the area.

“It’s ambitious but so far things are going well.”

 ?? Photograph: DPA/AFP/Getty Images ?? A pair of Spix's macaws in an aviary in Schöeneich­e, eastern Germany. The species disappeare­d from the wild more than 20 years ago.
Photograph: DPA/AFP/Getty Images A pair of Spix's macaws in an aviary in Schöeneich­e, eastern Germany. The species disappeare­d from the wild more than 20 years ago.

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