







| Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANIMALIA | CHORDATA | AVES | Apodiformes | Trochilidae |
| Scientific Name: | Eriocnemis nigrivestis | ||||||
| Species Authority: | (Bourcier & Mulsant, 1852) | ||||||
Common Name/s:
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| Red List Category & Criteria: | Critically Endangered B1ab(i,ii,iii,v) ver 3.1 | |||||||||||||||
| Year Assessed: | 2009 | |||||||||||||||
| Assessor/s | BirdLife International | |||||||||||||||
| Evaluator/s: | Bird, J., Butchart, S., Symes, A.(BirdLife International) | |||||||||||||||
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Justification: This species has a very small range, being known with certainty only from two locations. Its small subpopulations are suspected to suffer ongoing declines owing to deforestation within a severely fragmented habitat and increasing impacts of climate change. Consequently it qualifies as Critically Endangered. |
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| History: |
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| Population: |
Jahn (2008).
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| Population Trend: |
Decreasing
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| Habitat and Ecology: |
It inhabits humid and wet cloud forest, and especially high-Andean montane forest, including elfin forest and forest borders at 1,700-3,500 m4,7. It is uncertain whether historical records of up to 4,700 m are due to mislabelling or whether they indicate that habitat structure and plant species's composition of páramos has considerably changed over the last century7,9. Black-breasted Puffleg historically seemed to be most numerous between 2,400-3,050 m from April to September and above 3,100 m from November to February during the presumed breeding season. In recent years, most records were obtained between 2,850 and 3,500 m, with dispersing immatures occurring as low as 1,700 m4,5,7,11. It has recently been recorded along bushy forest edges along road sides, steep slopes with stunted vegetation and from taller montane forest interiors and clearings4,5,7,10. Although it is more of a generalist than previously reported, seasonal altitudinal migrations are thought to be determined by the seasonal flowering of specific vines and species such as fuchsias and ericaceous trees10. It has been recorded using 27 different species of food-plants, thus it is not believed to be restricted in range owing to dietary constraints4,5,7.
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| Systems: | Terrestrial |
| Major Threat(s): |
The main threat is the felling of forest for timber and charcoal, facilitating the introduction of cattle and the eventual spread of the agricultural frontier for ranching and to a lesser extent production of crops1,4,5. In Canton Cotacachi, Imbabura, 45% of households still use firewood and charcoal for cooking and heating, contributing to the destruction of key habitat7. The situation is similar on the west slope of Volcán Pichincha, where some families still produce charcoal for auto-consumption and commercialisation in Quito7. Suitable habitat on ridge-crests is disappearing more rapidly than surrounding vegetation, because the crests provide flat ground for cultivating potatoes and livestock-grazing within otherwise steep terrain10. The Toisán population is threatened by rapid deforestation on the south-west slope of the cordillera, copper mining concessions, and invasions of landless farmers within the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve4,7. Some ridges where it formerly occurred are now almost completely devoid of natural vegetation and, even if it still occurs in these areas, it is unlikely to be numerous. Around 93% of the suitable habitat within its probable historic range has been degraded or destroyed3, with 97% lost in Pinchincha Province5. Human induced fires threaten large tracts of forest during the dry season4. The construction of a pipeline at Cerro Chiquilipe led to habitat destruction for the pipeline itself, an access road and a depressurisation station despite the known presence of the hummingbird5. Volcán Pichincha has sporadically erupted since 1999, and ash-fall has been considerable in the area. The impacts of this on the species and its habitat are unknown. Climate change in the future may push the climate zone for this species above the current treeline4, and could lead to increased competition with Gorgeted Sunangel Helingelus strophianus as that species expands its altitudinal range4. However, the current treeline is thought to be lower than it was historically owing to centuries of anthropogenic stresses (particularly fire) causing the gradual loss and fragmentation of high altitude forest4.
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| Conservation Actions: |
Conservation actions underway: CITES Appendix II. Media coverage of recent research on the species and threats to its habitat has encouraged the authorities to control access and forbid charcoal production at Yanacocha1. The area was subsequently purchased by the Jocotoco Foundation and protects c.1000 ha of key habitat for the species. An additional 26 ha has recently been purchased adjacent to the reserve for reforestation (of native cloudforest) for a carbon offsetting scheme by Bird Holidays, a birdwatching tour company6. The neighbouring private reserve Hacienda Verdecocha protects an additional 1,200 ha of optimal habitat. A large part of the unexplored primary forest of Volcán Pichincha's western slopes are protected by Bosque Protector Mindo-Nambillo reserve4. Western slopes of the Cordillera de Toisán are protected within the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve4. A Species Action Plan was developed in 2007 and published in 20087, and actions so far have included a community and stakeholder outreach programme in Pichincha province, the formation of a Local Conservation Group, production and distribution of environmental education materials, reforestation activities on cattle pastures and other degraded lands on the Hacienda Verdecocha and Yanacocha Reserves and initiation of a standardised bird monitoring programme, while project proposals for livelihood alternatives have been developed and presented to potential donors.
Expand awareness campaigns to other areas, particularly the Íntag valley and the Volcán Atacazo7. Implement recently-developed management plans to improve protection of the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve and the Protective Forest Mindo-Nambillo through law enforcement against illegal logging, hunting, and colonisation inside the reserves, and sustainable management projects in their buffer zones7. Survey unexplored forest tracts, particularly the western slope of Volcán Pichincha, Volcán Atacazo and the main massif of the Toisán2,5,7. Identify key sites for new community and private reserves7. Lobby for legislation prohibiting mining in the Cordillera de Toisán7. Provide local people with alternative incomes that to do not damage the species's habitat5,7, and develop and implement an endowment fund strategy for conservation easements7. Continue to reforest degraded lands and re-establish biological corridors to guarantee connectivity between remnant forest fragments and continuous habitat5,7. Pre-emptively restore native woody vegetation in at least 30% of grass páramo within the Cotacachi-Cayapas Ecological Reserve, Volcán Pichincha, and Volcán Atacazo over the next 25 years in anticipation of future climate change4,7. Monitor changes in habitat on a five-yearly basis7. Carry out studies on feeder-transmitted diseases7.
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| Citation: | BirdLife International 2009. Eriocnemis nigrivestis. In: IUCN 2009. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 21 November 2009. |
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