The Plight of Yellow-crested Cockatoos
Transcription
The Plight of Yellow-crested Cockatoos
The Rarest Cockatoo is On the Doorstep of Extinction: Is it Too Late To Save the Masakambing Cockatoo ( Cacatua sulphurea abbotti ) ? Stewart Metz, Director & Bonnie Zimmermann, VP With the indispensable in-field work of Dudi Nandika and Dwi Agustina (Konservasi Kakatua Indonesia) The Ravages of the Illegal Wild Bird Trade can be Rapid & Devastating (in certain situations) Cacatua sulphurea abbotti : Discovered by Dr. WL Abbott in 1907 Written up by H. Oberholser in 1919 (Proc US Natl Museum) At first, present in large flocks In 1980’s, oilmen and traders from Bali and Sumbawa trapped them in the hundreds, often using nets. By the 1990’s, the large flocks had disappeared and in a single decade, the cockatoo was on the verge of extinction Mysteries of Yellow-crested Cockatoos (putatively, Abbott’s cockatoos) Prambanan Temple is the largest Hindu Temple in Indonesia Built ~ 850-900 A.D. in Yogyacarta (essentially between Bali and Jakarta). The temple contains a series of bas reliefs of YCC: Similar reliefs are seen at the Buddhist Borobudur temple (one of the Seven Wonders) at Cirebon in West Java. Construction started ~ 750 AD The Most ‘Recent’ Censuses** of Masakambing Island, Prior to Involvement of IPP and Konservasi Kakatua Indonesia 1994: 10 individuals 1995: 8 1996: 7 1997: 5 1998: 6 1999: 5, showing an almost linear and unchecked decline Most of the reports are unpublished and written in bahasa Indonesia Note: Cockatoos were wiped out on Masalembu Island, leaving Masakambing as their sole range APPROACH # 1: Working Towards a Paradigm Shift The Conservation-Awareness-Pride (C-A-P) Program For schoolchildren: Age-appropriate games and tools e.g., Instructional videos** ; t-shirts and backpacks; stickers for notebooks; coloring books (“ Burung Apa Itu?”), etc bird-watching trips **Questionnaires given both before and after the in-class programs, have shown remarkable changes in attitude towards the cockatoo Some of the Tools of the Conservation-Awareness-Pride Program For adults * For men: Meetings with local leaders, police, military ; placement of signposts, banners in key locations (eg, harbors); “Forest Warden” approach to protect cockatoos** For women: Make souvenirs with cockatoo logo Brimob (Special Police Unit) * ** Signpost at Harbor The Program is designed to nurture long-term community involvement and empowerment not just to deter smuggling but to prevent disturbance to nesting cockatoos—e.g., from noise Mackeral crackers made by village women as souvenirs “Beka”=Cockatoo An Event with a Hint of Optimism: Villagers Return a Fallen Fledgling to its Nest (photo taken using a cell phone) Approach #2: Ecological studies related to survival Masakambing (Abbott’s) Cockatoo feasting on the male fruit of the Sukun plant FLORA The flora used by the cockatoo were identified during line transects 47 foodstuffs were identified, including fruits, flowers, and seeds 5 of these also act as nest trees HOWEVER Masakambing Island has lost 90-95% of indigenous habitat. Therefore, we trained students to plant new crops critical to both cockatoos and villagers: sunflower; corn; and mangrove. Women of the village are involved in this and other activities, such as souvenirs (pens,candy,cups,soap) Planting Mangrove Ecological Studies, II: Breeding : pairing, nest seeking, copulation, fledging were all observed Pre-Mating Copulation Approach #3: Legal Protection Working to Heighten Awareness—and to Protect the Cockatoo through New Laws The first ‘Perdes’ (Local Law) was passed in 2009-- primarily through the efforts of Dudi Nandiki and Dwi Agustina, our colleagues in Konservasi Kakatua Indonesia A key paragraph reads “Everyone [is] forbidden to catch, hurt, kill, save, possess, keep, bring and trade cockatoo ; [and] is forbidden to [export] the cockatoo from Masakambing ... Every person who lives inside or outside of Masakambing is forbidden to ….trade it. “ Some Other Potential Obstacles Still Facing Masakambing Cockatoos •Risk of annihilation from natural disasters* •Decrease in genetic diversity (due to small population size, in-breeding) •Aging population; ratio of females to males** •Food Depletion as Population Rises •Disease Any approach will require a long-term solution with benefits to local villagers ( capacity building ) *Also includes possible “bottleneck effect” (ensuing genetic drift in the surviving population) ** Currently, this ratio appears to be 1:1, or very close to it 73% of the World’s Population (2011) in one tree …and vulnerable to a single natural catastrophe C. sulphurea sulphurea, (wild) in Sulawesi Is there Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease in Wild Yellow-crested Cockatoos? C. sulphurea, confiscated from Jakarta “Bird Market” and PBFD is known to be present in a breeding center What is the status of the Masakambing cockatoo now (2013) ? RESULTS OF SEQUENTIAL CENSUSES OF MASAKAMBING ISLAND (Due to the tiny size of Masakambing Island –5 km.², data represent assessments of the entire island) --Results from 1994-1999 (on the left) preceded those of IPP. --Results from 2008 (on the right) represent our work. They appear to indicate, least in a hyper-short time frame, a reversal of an inexorable decline towards extinction . FLASH: The May, 2013 census was just completed and indicated a further increase to 17 individuals, more than 300% of the basal starting point …but one bird was lost CONCLUSIONS •Like most beautiful and rare things, the value of the Masakambing cockatoo may rise; recognition of its location and isolation may increase it as a target for poachers • Constriction in habitat and foodstuffs poses even greater threats •Thus it still faces extinction in the absence ongoing, multi-faceted efforts to conserve it “ By this intricacy, this supreme delicacy and elegance, understand that neither you nor a multitude of you could make such a creature… If you could make even a replica, you could not make it live… If it did not exist, you could not imagine it. Since it does exist, please do not neglect…it” (Wendell Berry, 1991) We hope that our talk didn’t do this to you… We are grateful to Loro Parque Fundacion, Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund, and World Parrot Trust for support and/or collaboration in various aspects of this work We would like to express special thanks to Mark and Marie for inviting us, and to Rich and Kathryne Thorpe, for making our talk possible, and for their long-term dedication to the protection of cockatoos and other parrots Stewart & Bonnie