







| Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANIMALIA | CHORDATA | AVES | Passeriformes | Turdidae |
| Scientific Name: | Turdus helleri | |||
| Species Authority: | (Mearns, 1913) | |||
Common Name/s:
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| Red List Category & Criteria: | Critically Endangered B2ab(i,ii,iii,iv,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 is considered Critically Endangered because it has a tiny occupied range of c.3.5 km2, within which its montane forest habitat has been severely fragmented and continues to decline in both extent and quality. |
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| History: |
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| Population: |
Waiyaki and Samba (2000)
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| Population Trend: |
Decreasing
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| Habitat and Ecology: |
It is confined to montane cloud-forest8, not venturing into secondary growth, scrub or cultivated areas9, although the areas where it occurs have been heavily logged in the past3. Despite much research, very few inter-fragment movements have been recorded8. It prefers well-shaded areas with a dense understorey, high litter-cover and little or no herbaceous cover8, and consequently is found at greater density in Mbolobo, the least disturbed forest area, and is rarest in Chawia, which has a more open canopy and a very shrubby understorey3,8,10. It rarely ascends more than 2 m above ground9. The diet is predominantly fruit3. It is monogamous and terrestrial, with overlapping home ranges8 and breeding between January and July. The clutch-size is 1-37. Orange Ground-thrush Zoothera gurneyi often occurs in exactly the same areas as T. helleri3.
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| Systems: | Terrestrial |
| Major Threat(s): |
Most indigenous forest has been cleared in the Taita Hills for cultivation or reforestation with non-native timber, and the remaining tiny area is under serious threat from both clearance and degradation2,4,6, although habitat quality in the largest two fragments remains good8,14. A highly male-biased sex ratio in Chawia (only 10% of birds were female) might have significant negative consequences for the subpopulation's long-term survival5,8,10. The species's reproductive rate may thus be lower than expected5. Where habitat disturbance leads to deteriorations in body condition, the long-term survival of sub-populations may be put at risk11.
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| Conservation Actions: |
Conservation actions underway: The Forest Department is now safeguarding the remaining forest fragments of the Taita Hills, which have been designated as an IBA. At present, efforts are being undertaken (ban of cattle grazing, enrichment planting with seedlings) to restore indigenous forest fragment Chawia; while it remains to be seen what affect this has on the the thrush population, unringed juveniles have been seen. An ongoing collaborative research project includes a large ornithological component, which aims to provide the necessary ecological data to plan conservation policies for this and other endemic species in the area. As part of the BirdLife Preventing Extinctions programme for this species and Taita Apalis, Species Guardian Mwangi Githiru has begun to implement the following actions: 1. Tree nurseries are being established by local community-led Environmental Committees. Indigenous trees will be used to restore degraded habitat and enhance the connectivity of scattered forest fragments, whilst on adjacent agricultural land fast-growing non-native species will be planted to provide a buffer zone. 2. Income-generating activities, including bee-keeping and butterfly-rearing have been initiated and farmers have been educated in environmentally responsible agriculture practices. 3. In order to secure the long-term survival of the Chawia population a translocation project is being developed.
Continue to remove non-native trees from within indigenous forest3, and continue to reforest cleared areas with native trees2,3. Further develop sustainable forest-use schemes, based on ecotourism and harvesting forest products2,3 and outreach programmes to local communities2,3,13. Strengthen the population at Chawia through carefully managed translocations13.
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| Citation: | BirdLife International 2009. Turdus helleri. In: IUCN 2009. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 09 February 2010. |
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