Cyanopsitta Magazine.. - Loro Parque Fundación
Transcription
Cyanopsitta Magazine.. - Loro Parque Fundación
Cyanopsitta June 2001 No. 61 FUNDACI ÓN Cyanopsitta Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Cyanopsitta - Latin for blue parrot. The only member of this genus is Cyanopsitta spixii, the Spix’s Macaw. It is a highly endangered species, symbol of Loro Parque Fundación, and of the need to conserve our planet. Message from the Founder 2 Conservation and Marketing 3 New ecological seal «Animal embassy» 3 A comment on parrot nutrition 4 Training of CITES staff in Loro Parque 7 Meeting Point 8 Loro Parque Hotline 9 New Honorary Member of LPF 9 Foundation News 10 Report from the Red-tailed Amazon project in Superagüi (Brazil) 12 The Yellow-eared Parrot: good news and an unexpected danger 18 End of the first phase of the Tanimbar project (Indonesia) 20 Front Cover: Poster of the V International Parrot Congress Editorial Office: Loro Parque S.A. 38400 Puerto de la Cruz Tenerife, Canary Islands Spain Tel.: + 34 922 374081 Fax: + 34 922 375021 E-mail: <loroparque@loroparque.com> <dir.general@loroparque-fundacion.org> Editorial Committee: Wolfgang Kiessling, Inge Feier, Yves de Soye, Dr. Javier Almunia, Corinna Brauer. Visit our websites: Visit the website of Loro Parque Fundación, which provides you with detailed information on our programmes at: <http://www.loroparquefundacion.org>. For the website of Loro Parque, please check out <www.loroparque.com>. Membership: Become a member of Loro Parque Fundación to support us in our activities. You will then receive our trimestral newsletter Cyanopsitta, as well as a supporter’s card permitting free entry to Loro Parque during the validity of your membership. The current annual membership fees are: Adults (non-resident): ........... 15,000 Ptas. Adults (resident) & children (non-resident): .......... 7,500 Ptas. Children (resident): ................. 3,750 Ptas. Please send us your membership subscription by mail, fax or e-mail, or call us, and we will sign you up immediately. No. 61 - June 2001 Message from the F ounder Founder It is always a pleasure to welcome summer time in Tenerife, especially when at the same time we have the possibility to cool down while admiring the dark and freezing winter in our penguinarium. Unfortunately, our most emblematic project, the Spix’s Macaw Conservation Programme, has likewise entered a gloomy period during the last few months. Since the latest disappointing meeting of the Committee for the Recovery of the Spix´s Macaw in Brasilia, we have been awaiting news from IBAMA regarding the new direction that the recovery project is going to take. Unfortunately, we have only received a discouraging silence, which has merely been interrupted by some funding requests. We have not even been sent a summary of the meeting that took place in Brasilia, nor the management plan for the captive population that Natasha Schischakin was supposed to prepare. The only news we have received about this matter is that a meeting was celebrated in Switzerland attended by some of the owners, Natasha Schischakin and Richard Porter (who was not even a member of the dissolved Committee for the Recovery of the Spix’s Macaw), with the objective of establishing a group of independent breeders. This does not seem to be the most reasonable attitude a the moment, when all the interested parties should be trying to join efforts, and not creating differences and confrontations. I wish that all the parties involved that could favour the conservation of the Spix’s Macaw collaborate in an honest and generous way, forgetting the selfish human necessity of protagonism. We at Loro Parque Fundación continue our daily work to make more efficient our efforts to protect nature. In this sense, it is a pleasure for me to inform you that Dr. Jørgen B. Thomsen, senior vice-president of the prestigious organisation Conservation International, has joined our scientific advisory board. Previously, Dr. Thomsen has been related to many other international organisations dedicated to the conservation of nature and has an extraordinary experience with parrots. Without any doubt, Dr. Thomsen will enrich our labour, our knowledge and experience, and together with the rest of the highly estimated members of our advisory board he will help us to improve our efforts. I would also like to call your attention on the celebration of the III Regional Conference on Marketing in Zoos in the Hotel Botánico organised by EAZA. On this occasion, we met some old and new friends and were able to establish a great number of contacts, apart from getting to know a great deal of ideas to connect the marketing world with conservation. In the next issue of Cyanopsitta we will report in detail on some of the contents of the conference. At the same time, another event took place that will entail many discussions in the future, i.e. the signing of a Memorandum of Agreement between Loro Parque and the Institute of Responsible Tourism, an organisation linked with UNESCO. The goal of this pact is to develop a quality seal for “ecological” zoos, regarding aspects such as energetic efficiency, waste removal, animal management, conservation efforts and so on. We think it is our responsibility to collaborate, and, at the same time, assure you that we will do our best so that Loro Parque is one of the first zoos to obtain this seal. Bank Account: Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA) Puerto de la Cruz 0182 5310 61 001635615-8 Wolfgang Kiessling 2 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 EAZA organises a congress on marketing in zoos in Loro Parque Conservation and Marketing The European Association of Zoos and Aquariums (EAZA) accepted Loro Parque’s invitation to celebrate, for the very first time in Spain, its III Regional Conference that took place on 1 st and 2 nd June in the Hotel Botánico. The conference was attended by over one hundred representatives of European zoos as well as the president of the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA), Willie Labuschagne, the president of the European Association of Zoos and Aquariums (EAZA), Miklós Persányi and the president of the Iberian Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AIZA), Esteve Tomás. Inaugurational remarks were given by Willie Labuschagne, as well as by Professor Gordon McGregor Reid, Director of Chester Zoo, Wolfgang Kiessling, Director of Loro Parque, Milagros Brito, Regional Vicecouncillor of Environment, Pilar Parejo, local Councillor of Tourism, and Luis Ramallo, President of the Spanish Commission of UNESCO. Yves de Soye, Director of Loro Parque Fundacion, spoke about the organisation’s conservation work; right: Prof. Günther Nogge, Chairman of EAZA’s Research Committee. The topics discussed and the follow-up discussions were so interesting and productive that we have decided to offer you more detailed information on some of the lectures in the next issue of Cyanopsitta. During the two sessions, zoo directors, advertising experts and educators discussed the way in which the marketing of zoos could be used in favour of nature conservation. Themes discussed were, among others, “Visitor attraction or conservation organisation?”, “Conservation through commerce”, “Changing public expectations”, “Marketing the conservation message” or “Internet evolution: Hitting the web”. After the two sessions, the participants had a day off to either go on a boat trip to observe the pilot whales in the south of Tenerife, visit the Mount Teide National Park or, spend a great time in Loro Parque. New ecological seal «Animal Embassy» Loro Parque has committed itself to collaborate in the design of a specific seal of ecological quality for zoos, which will be denominated “Animal Embassy” “Animal Embassy” tries to fit in the system of Responsible Tourism developed by ITR by means of efficiency, technological innovation considering sustainability, and assimilating ecological criteria already developed for the “Biosphere Hotels” seal, complementing them with other specific criteria created for zoos; these will especially be related to the quality of animal management, education, research and conservation efforts. After the inauguration of the Regional Conference on marketing in zoos, a Memorandum of Agreement between Loro Parque and the Institute for Responsible Tourism (ITR) was signed. The institution, closely related to UNESCO, is developing a series of ecological seals for tourist resorts, so the holidaymakers know which are most respectful with nature. The signing of the memorandum was attended by Dr. Tomás de Azcárate y Bang, president of ITR, Wolfgang Kiessling, representing Loro Parque, as well as the president of the Spanish Commission of UNESCO, D. Luis Ramallo, the local Counselor of Tourism, Pilar Parejo, the president of WAZA, Willie Labuschagne, and finally the president of EAZA, Miklós Pérsanyi. 3 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 A comment on parrot nutrition Petra Wolf and J. Kamphues Institut für Tierernährung der Tierärztlichen Hochschule Hannover, Bischofsholer Damm 15, 30173 Hannover, Germany The market offers a huge variety of different components and products for parrot nutrition, such as seeds, day to day food products or special mineral and vitamin components. However, the most important basis for parrot nutrition are general seed mixtures that are often enriched with additional components such as peanuts and sunflower seeds - depending on the ideas and experience of the parrot holder. Additionally, parrots are often fed on fruit and vegetables as well as products that are actually developed for other animals (e.g. cereal flakes for dogs etc.); but also the food industry supplies special food items to “complement” or “upgrade” the so-called basic diet of parrots. of fatty components (sunflower seeds, peanuts etc.), parrots usually prefer those to others that mainly contain carbohydrate seeds. This feeding behaviour is not a result of the varying energetic contents (mixtures based on seeds rich in fat even offer higher energetic values - reason why one would expect a lesser consumption), but rather of the differing acceptance by the parrots of each and every component. Considering the variety of products that leave much to desire as far as the declaration of their chemical composition is concerned, as well as the lack of information in literature on the best possible species-orientated diets, parrot owners find themselves confronted with uncertainties when it comes to establish the daily diet for their parrots. Due to the feeding behaviour of parrots, which is, apart from selection, characterized by the way the different components are handled (the kernels of the seeds being ingested, while the hulls and shells are part of the daily left-overs), it would be interesting to know the quantities of food that would have to be offered to the parrots to avoid excessive waste of food on the one hand, but assure a sufficient supply of nutrients on the other. As a result, to assure this supply, a parrot must be offered between 65-85% more of what it actually ingested (in the case of a common seed mixture composed by sunflower (striped and white ones) and oat seeds, safflower, hemp, corn and teasel). Moreover, it has to be taken into consideration that the ingested food amount not only depends on the type of food, but also on the different parrot species (see table 1). Except for the growth period, which is relatively short in parrots, and the breeding season, the parrots’ normal metabolism provides that the ingested food and water maintain all the necessary body functions (especially body temperature and mass) under normal conditions. When offering common seed mixtures, the first problem consists of misjudging the food portion, regarding the selective food behaviour of parrots. This simply means that the parrots don’t eat everything they’re offered, thus existing a clear difference between the intended and the actual food ingestion. Very often the information given regarding the chemical composition of parrot food only refers to the entire seeds without taking into consideration that the parrots peel the hulls off before ingesting them, as mentioned before. To estimate the absorption of nutrients, merely the contents of the parts of seeds that have been ingested are important. When offered seed mixtures consisting mainly in g dry matter/animal/day in % of body mass Lovebirds 4.5 7.20 Cacatúas 13.0 4.70 Amazons 15.0 3.60 African greys 13.0 3.10 Table 1 : Average food consumption of parrots using common seed mixtures (values in g dry matter (DM)/animal/day) 4 Cyanopsitta sunflower seeds safflower hemp pumpkin seeds peanuts millet seeds oat seeds corn No. 61 - June 2001 XP (1) 261 285 337 402 335 142 156 95,6 XFi (1) 594 587 522 459 574 54,6 82,0 44,4 XF (1) 38,8 20,7 35,0 35,2 38,5 23,7 17,1 18,5 XX (1) 61,7 67,0 55,5 32,0 30,3 757 723 825 Energy (2) 25,1 26,5 24,3 22,3 25,5 16,7 16,8 15,6 Ca (3) 1,68 2,31 0,59 1,83 0,37 0,32 0,41 0,21 P (3) 8,87 8,95 14,3 11,3 5,83 4,06 4,54 4,52 Table 2: Chemical composition of some common seed mixtures. XP=protein, XFi=fat, XF=fibre, XX=carbohydrates, Ca=calcium, P=phosphorus. (1) g/kg dry matter (DM), (2) MJ MEkg, (3) g/kg DM. to be needed. It is proven that the difference in nutrients after the peeling of the seeds is considerable. Usually, the removal of the spelts leads to a reduced absorption of fibres, while the components that are rich in energy (e.g. fat) as well as the actual energy content of the ingested food increase. At the same time, a slight increase of the protein concentrations compared to the complete seeds is noted (see table 2). On the other hand, the already low calcium content decreases even more through the dehusking of the seeds, while the phosphor concentration increases, thus leading to a further deterioration of the calcium/ phosphor relation to 0.08 : 1. The recommended relation would be around 1.5 : 1. The natrium concentrations are also lower than expected from the analyses of the unpeeled seeds; therefore, it is adviseable to add corresponding supplements. As already mentioned, when dehusking the seeds - especially those with high fat concentrations - the birds consume a higher amount of protein ingesting the kernels of the seeds in comparison to the protein content of the whole seeds. To this regard - and based on the information obtained from budgerigars (DREPPER et al. 1988) - the common seed mixtures supposedly provide the necessary quantity of proteins to the animals (see table 3). Furthermore, not only the composition of seed mixtures and the sufficient amount of food offered to cover the nutritious needs of parrots should be looked after, but also the provision of water, since there are notable discrepancies between the different species (see table 4). Deficiencies might occur in parrots mainly fed on corn. Moreover, attention must be drawn to the low methionine and cystine concentrations in relation to the energy content in the case of high amounts of oat seeds. When feeding mixtures containing a high amount of fat rich seeds (sunflower, safflower, hemp) no additional feeding on protein or aminoacid supplements is supposed seeds oat seeds corn sunflower safflower hemp MQFB With reference to the dry matter, cockatoos absorb only 1 ml water per g DM ingested - probably resulting from their evolution on the Australian continent, where the ability of storing water is essential for survival due to the dry climate. Amazons, too, show a low water in the food intake crude protein g crude protein g/kg DM por MJ ME 142 7.43 98 5.80 277 11.1 283 12.1 352 14.3 110 7.70 in relation to energy (g / 1 MJ ME) Lysine Methionine Arginine + Cystine 0.30 0.18 0.40 0.18 0.23 0.29 0.27 0.33 0.67 0.31 0.44 1.04 0.36 0.35 1.32 0.17 0.27 0.27 Table 3: Contents of proteins and aminoacids of different parrot seed mixtures (compared to the minimum quantities for budgerigars (MQFB), Drepper et al. 1988). 5 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 ml/individual/day ml/g DM Lovebirds 5.20 - 14.1 2.0 - 2.17 Cockatoos 9.43 - 19.6 1.00 - 1.11 Amazons 17.5 - 34.9 1.58 - 1.67 African greys 19.0 - 35.9 2.00 - 2.13 Table 4: Daily ingestion of water by parrots that are offered common seed mixtures · Minerals/vitamins In view of the insufficient mineralization of many common food mixtures, the use of additional mineral products is recommended, especially providing the necessary calcium (egg shells, sepia, CaCO3-stones etc.). The additional feeding of fruit in the first place supplies an increase of vitamins and liquids rather than minerals, (the supply of the latter being of no greater importance). consumption at 1.5 to 1.7 ml per g DM, while lovebirds and African parrots consume notably more, i.e. 2 to 2.2 ml per g DM. Conclusion · Food quantities In general, a consumption of 7% (lovebirds) and 3-5% (cockatoos, amazons, African parrots) of the body mass has to be expected in the case of common seed mixtures. The total amounts of food ingested by lovebirds varied up to 4.5 grs, those ingested by cockatoos, amazons and African parrots between 10 and 20 g. Having discussed the effects of the dehusking of seeds, the daily offered seed mixture under normal conditions should be of 8 - 12 g per animal in the case of lovebirds and an average of 30 g in the case of cockatoos, amazons and African parrots. If the amount of food offered to the parrots exceeds their actual needs, there is a risk that the parrots select specific seeds, leading to the consumption of a virtual “monodiet”, apart from the resulting waste of food and unnecessary high food costs. The food quantities ingested by parrots not only depend on the food itself, but on other factors as well such as cage occupation or size (with a varying mobility). When calculating the nutritious supply of parrots, it has to be taken into consideration that the seeds are peeled before they’re ingested; therefore, the nutrients contained in the “interior” of the seed are crucial for the daily supply (not those contained in the entire seeds). · Water The total average amount of water ingested from the drinking dishes by parrots fed on seed mixtures was of 10 ml (lovebirds), 15 ml (cockatoos) and between 17 and 35 ml (amazons and African parrots). Through the additional feeding on fruit (apples, oranges), the total water consumption increased up to 40 ml/animal per day, while the amount of water ingested from the drinking dishes reduced considerably. Literature Coenen, M. and J. Kamphues (1995): Ernährungsbedingte Gesundheitsstörungen bei Zoo- und Wildtieren Spezifische Risiken und klinisch manifeste Erkrankungen. Verh.ber. Erkrg. Zootiere, 37, 251-258 Kamphues, J. (1993): Ernährungsbedingte Störungen in der Ziervogelhaltung - Ursachen, Einflüsse und Aufgaben. Monatshefte Veterinärmedizin 48, 85-90 Kamphues, J. (1994): Die art- und bedarfsgerechte Ernährung von Ziervögeln - neue Aufgaben für die Tierernährung an der TiHo. „Forschung fürs Leben“, Hrsg.: Rektor der Tierärztlichen Hochschule Hannover, Schlütersche Verlagsanstalt, Hannover, 13-19 Kamphues, J.. P. Wolf, G. Bayer und M. Wentker (1993): Zusammensetzung, Akzeptanz und Verdaulichkeit wichtiger Einzelfuttermittel bei Ziervögeln (Kanarien, Agaporniden und Graupapageien). In: XVIII. World Congress of the World Small Animal Association (WSAVA), Berlin 1993. Proc. 128-135 Kamphues, J., J. Leibetseder und D. Schneider (1999): Supplemente zu Vorlesungen und Übungen in der Tierernährung. Schaper, Hannover Souci, S.W., W. Fachmann und H. Kraut (1986): Die · Proteins Theoretically, the protein needs of parrots are guaranteed when offering common seed mixtures under normal conditions; thus the feeding of additional animal products (high in proteins!) usually leads to an excessive ingestion of proteins, entailing health risks. Under special conditions (growth, moulting), supplements are necessary, especially a sufficient supply of sulphurated aminoacids. Feeding parrots on so-called „Complete diet mixtures“ does not always cover the daily needs of nutrients, and complementary products have to be added to the food (minerals and/or vitamins). 6 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Verhaltensstörungen beim Vogel, 39-42 Wolf, P. und J. Kamphues (1994): Die Futter- und Wasseraufnahme bei Agaporniden (Unzertrennliche) Grunddaten und Einflußfaktoren. Die Voliere 17, 324-334 Wolf, P., N. Kummerfeld und J. Kamphues (2001): Skeletterkrankungen bei jungen Graupapageien (Psittacus erithacus) infolge Fehl- bzw. Mangelernährung (in Vorbereitung) Wolf, P., N. Rabehl und J. Kamphues (1995): Untersuchungen zur Körperzusammensetzung (Feder-/ Skelettanteile sowie Nährstoffgehalte) adulter Ziervögel verschiedener Spezies (Kanarien, Wellensittiche, Agaporniden, Amazonen, Graupapageien). Proc. Soc. Nutr. Physiol. 4, 57. Zusammensetzung der Lebensmittel, Nährwert-Tabellen 1986/87. Wiss. Verlagsgesellschaft, Stuttgart 1986 Wendler, C. (1995): Untersuchungen zu Möglichkeiten der Mineralstoffversorgung von Kanarien (Serinus canaria) über Handelsfuttermittel. Med. vet. Diss. Hannover Wentker, M. (1995): Die Fütterung von Papageien (Feldstudie) sowie Futteraufnahme und Verdaulichkeit wichtiger Einzelfuttermittel bei Graupapageien. Diss., Med. vet. Wolf, P. und J. Kamphues (1994): Konsequenzen aus dem arttypischen Futteraufnahmeverhalten verschiedener Ziervögel. Tagungsbereicht der IX. DVG-Tagung über Vogelkrankheiten, Tauben, Verhalten und Training of CITES staff in Loro Parque Representatives from South Africa and Slowakia were practicing plant and animal protection in Loro Parque in Tenerife. The reason: Problems with the fulfilment of the directives set by CITES, The Convention on International Trade on Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora. CITES is demanding that trade with endangered species is forbidden, or to permit it only with the legal authorization for importation and exportation. Depending on the status of protection, species on the way to extinction are listed in Appendix I (an almost complete trade ban) or in Appendix II (controlled trade on presentation of legal documentation). But the laws established cannot always fulfil what they establish. Since it includes more than 8.000 species of animals and 40.000 species of plants, the convention has become so complex, that the 160 member states have encountered difficulties in its implementation. Their biggest problem is to identify the species. Consequently, the black market is flourishing, especially with rare - and expensive - animals, plants and products won from them. South Africa has became a strategic point for international contraband, including those species which are not found in Africa. Birgith Sloth (top left) and Petra Deimer (bottom right) together with some of the participants (some of the faces have been hidden deliberately to prevent that they’re recognized by the trafickers. This pilot project to carry out CITES practice was initiated by the Association of Protection of Sea Mammals (GSM), with financial help from the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), in order to facilitate the identification of species to the authorities. The Danish expert Birgith Sloth trained the selected candidates during a three week course, and during one week the group was invited to Loro Parque in Tenerife. The Loro Parque Fundación owns the largest parrot collection in the world, and also actively participates in the protection of these endangered birds in the wild. The group mostly studied parrots, but also other exotic animals and plants. When the participants of the course return to their own countries, they will be able to educate their own colleagues. (founded in 1973 with its headquarters in Switzerland) to help the responsible authorities, they clearly demonstrated that nothing could substitute for seeing the real thing. “To see an amazon or a macaw in real life is completely different to seeing them in a photograph”, said Lydia Osongo from South Africa, “and the image will stay much longer in your memory when you have observed the animal in real life. From now on, I will always be able to recognise it.” The group gratefully thanked Wolfgang and Brigitte Kiessling, the team from Loro Parque and the Hotel Botanico for all their help. In spite of the excellent manuals for recognition and computer programmes which were edited by CITES 7 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 ENCUENTROS - ENCUENTROS - ENCUENTROS - ENCUENTROS Carnival Associations from Düsseldorf and Duisburg during their traditional visit to Loro Parque, giving a special note to our dolphinarium. In April and May, several meetings with Primary School Directors were organised in Loro Parque, to show them the didactic material of our educational department. The ‘Asociación Deportiva Bicistar Loro Parque’ presented their project for the next season in our facilities. Two members of the CITES Secretariat in Switzerland, Malan Lindeque (left) and Jim Armstrong (centre), met Wolfgang Kiessling and the BNA administrator Lorenz Haut (right) to discuss the Spix’s Macaw project and other projects of Loro Parque Fundación. José Alberto Delgado (left), in charge of the technical staff of the Wildlife department of the Cabildo de Tenerife, during his visit with his family and friends. Loro Parque’s candidate was named carnival queen of Puerto de la Cruz 2001. The beautiful and charming young lady shared a day with us in Loro Parque. 300 members of the Rotary Club International that were participating in the XIX District Conference enjoyed a day in Loro Parque. Part of the group poses in front of the main entrance of Loro Parque. José Darias Jerez, a Spanish scientist who has been working almost 20 years in Antarctica, looking for marine substances with pharmacological applications, used Planet Penguin as background for a Spanish television news program, and was impressed by the extraordinary quality of the installations and the natural behaviour displayed by the penguins. 8 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 LORO PARQUE HOTLINE - LORO PARQUE HOTLINE Loro Parque has been awarded the most prestigious prize of the British tour operator Thomson the Gold Medal of Excellence in Tourism for the period 2000. This award is of great importance to us, since the nominees are selected according to the comments collected from the tour operator’s guests and staff. Once again, this award proves the efforts that Loro Parque is making throughout the year to satisfy the visitors, trying to accomplish maximum quality standards in the sector of tourism. compared to the Asian landscape this marvellous animal is used to in the wild. Loro Parque’s Parrot Workshop has accomplished its fifth edition, which took place from May 3rd to 10th. We can say that this encounter, which gathers parrot lovers and breeders, is totally consolidated, and each new edition receives a good response. The program included the traditional experts’ presentations: (Miguel Bueno, Marcellus Bürkle, Matthias Reinschmidt and Yves de Soye), a guest speech from Doris Dühr and a slide presentation by Heinz Lambert; during their visit behind the scenes, the participants could experience “in situ” the exceptional management conditions of the animal collection of Loro Parque and the Fundación. Readers interested in attending the VI Parrot th rd Workshop that will take place from 16 to 23 November 2001, can get further information from the publisher of PAPAGEIEN magazine. Meanwhile, the staff of Loro Parque Fundación will focus on the preparations of the V International Parrot Congress, which will be celebrated in September 2002. As you all know, Loro Parque undergoes a continuous process of modernisation in order to improve our animal management standards and the well-being of our visitors. This time, the tiger island has been improved, and its new aspect leaves little to be desired Alfonso de Borbón y Dampierre, honorary member of Loro Parque Fundación His Royal Highness Don Luis Alfonso de Borbón y Dampierre has had the kindness to accept becoming honorary member of Loro Parque Fundación. Don Luis Alfonso is a nephew of His Majesty Don Juan Carlos de Borbón y Borbón, King of Spain. At the end of March, he visited Loro Parque to inspect our facilities and to receive the honorary member diploma. His Royal Highness was impressed by the quality of our installations and the high standard of animal management in Loro Parque. During his visit, he could not resist to pose with the animals in some of the exhibits, and he showed strong interest in the foundation’s conservation work, especially in the field projects that are implemented in many countries of the world. Inge Feier handing over the diploma to Don Alfonso de Borbón y Dampierre 9 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 FOUNDATION NEWS - FOUNDATION NEWS - FOUNDATION NEWS In one of the Parrot workshops that was celebrated last year, Heide Naumann, who leads the Amata Bird Sanctuary (a fauna recovery centre) in Thailand, proposed that a vet from Thailand spent a period in Loro Parque to obtain training in avian veterinary medicine. The contacts were established and Loro Parque Fundación accepted to invite a vet for a period of two months. After analysing several candidates, the decision fell on Dr. Wichit Kongkham from Nakhon Ratchasima Zoo. Dr. Kongkham arrived here on the 19 th of March, and spent six weeks improving his veterinary knowledge about birds in the clinic of Loro Parque, together with Dr. Lorenzo Crosta and Marcellus Bürkle. At the beginning of May, he returned to Thailand, where he could teach his colleagues about the experiences gained in Loro Parque, thus improving the possibilities of survival of the rescued birds in the local recovery centres such as the Amata Bird Sanctuary. In the past months, a new member has been incorporated at Loro Parque Fundación. Matthias Reinschmidt, formerly editor of the magazine “Papageien”, has a large experience in parrot breeding and is well known among G e r m a n p a r r o t l o v e r s a n d b r e e d e r s . M r. Reinschmidt will collaborate in the management of our parrot collection. Another change has taken place in the Advisory Board of Loro Parque Fundación: the incorporation of Dr Jorgen Thomsen, Senior Vice-President of Conservation International and Executive Director of the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund. The latter is currently one of the world’s most important conservation funds and has its headquarters in Washington, DC. Dr Thomsen was Director of Traffic International for many years in the 1990’s, participated in the former IUCN Parrot Specialist Group, and has also been involved with the Spix’s Macaw Recovery Programme in Brazil. In issue 59 of Cyanopsitta, we reported on the new efforts that the foundation is directing towards the c o n s e r v a t i o n o f t h e e n d e m i c parrots of Dominica. As you will remember, the Sisserou (Amazona imperialis) and the Jaco ( A m a z o n a a r a u s i a c a) a r e b e i n g u s e d a s conservation flagship species to save the ecosystem of the Dominican rainforest. The field work in D o m i n i c a i s o n schedule, and the field team is progressing on the project objectives: determine the distribution and size of the parrots populations, establish a video monitoring system in order to document the reproduction and the parental care of the Sisserou, and equip a research laboratory in the Parrot Conservation and Research Centre (PCRC) in the botanical gardens of Roseau. The data collected in March was very informative, a great recruitment of chicks born in the breeding season 2000 could be observed, and everything hinted at a good breeding season in 2001. Simultaneously, the video equipment and the lab material arrived and was tested and installed. Then, also in March, an incident happened; a farmer was arrested for shooting p a r r o t s . L u c k i l y, t h e g o v e r n m e n t r e a c t e d immediately and the Minister of Agriculture together with the Director of the Forestry Department, held a press conference condemning the deed and announcing that rigorous actions will be taken against lawbreakers. Unfortunately, news in May were not so optimistic. When the field team was looking for 10 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 FOUNDATION NEWS - FOUNDATION NEWS - FOUNDATION NEWS active nests to install the video surveillance system, they found that the extreme drought had affected the parrot populations. There was no sign of Sisserou nesting anywhere, even Jacos were not breeding as expected. Moreover, apart from the bad meteorological conditions, the Forest and Wildlife Department of Dominca sent part of the staff stationed at Morne Diablotin National Park (MDNP) to the Central Forest Reserve due to the increasing number of ecological delicts that occurred in that area. Nevertheless, Paul Reillo confirmed that this would not affect the MDNP security, because the only access to the park is always controlled by the staff of the Interpretation Centre. In view of the project, Loro Parque Fundación offered the Dominican Government to return the Amazona arausiaca housed in the breeding centre of La Vera (a breeding loan from Bird Park Walsrode which endorsed the transfer). The bird came to Loro Parque some years ago, seriously damaged by the aggressive male she was paired with. However, the Dominican government rejected the offer because the bird’s health might be affected during the long trip back to the island. The support for the Philippine Cockatoo ( C a c a t u a h a e m a t u r o p y g i a) C o n s e r v a t i o n Programme, which was financed by Loro Parque Fundación with 25.000 US$ from 1999 to 2000, has been renewed with 62.646 US$, for the period until December 2002. This conservation programme has been active since 1992. In the last two years the project was focusing on the Rasa island population, and the last reports from Peter Widmann showed an expansion of the cockatoo’s population in the region. Cockatoos were observed breeding in suboptimal mangrove and riverine forests, which seems to indicate that the maximum population the natural habitat can support has been reached. This situation has brought about a dilemma; the next step for the conservation of the Philippine cockatoo should either be a reintroduction of individuals on other islands formerly inhabited by this species or, on the contrary, favour the expansive process registered in Rasa without artificial relocation of cockatoos. Re-introduction has the advantage of being able to select the new sites to be colonised by the birds, and consequently to successfully protect them, just as happened to the Rasa population. Natural expansion does not count with the problems related to the translocation of individuals but, on the other hand, may have other consequences, e.g. that the new colonised areas which can’t be protected that easily become a population sink for the Rasa population. In order to take the right decision on this problem it is necessary to obtain all possible information on the actual status of the cockatoo population in Rasa with its surrounding areas, and on the conservation status of potential reintroduction sites. This will be one of the fundamental targets of the second phase of the project, which, during the next years, will extend its range, while continuing its activities in Rasa. The project will improve education activities to reduce poaching and illegal traffic to get support from the local communities, and small projects to offer alternatives of sustainable development will be initiated. Loro Parque Fundación will be represented at several exhibitions within the next few months: 24 th - 26 th August in Iserlohn ( G e r m a n y ) , 5 th - 7 th O c t o b e r i n O l t e n (Switzerland), 26 th - 28 th October in Leipzig (Germany) and 24 th - 25 th November in Kassel (Germany). The Advisory Board of L oro P arque F undacion Loro Parque Fundacion Povl Jorgensen Aviculturist Haslev, Denmark Susan L. Clubb Avian Veterinarian Florida, USA Tomás de Azcárate y Bang Ministry of the Environment of the Canary Islands Tenerife, Spain Nigel J. Collar Birdlife International Leventis Fellow in Conservation Biology Cambridge University, England Ian R. Swingland Founder Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology Kent, England Jørgen B. Thomsen Senior Vice-President Conservation International Washington DC, USA David R. Waugh Director Royal Zoological Society of Scotland Edinburgh, Scotland 11 Wolfgang Grummt Animal Park Friedrichsfelde Berlin, Germany Roland Wirth President Zoological Society for the Protection of Species and Populations Munich, Germany Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 The flight towards conservation through community e Saving the Red-Tailed the Atlantic rainforest Text Suzana M. Padua, Sandra Navas, Karina Oliveira, M Andrea Caro Carrillo IPE - Instituto de Pesquisas Ecológicas Brazil Photographs IPE, Luiz Claudio Marigo, Loro Parque Fundación The Red-tailed Amazon (Amazona brasiliensis) is one of the most beautiful parrots of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, a factor that only increases the conservation challenges it now faces. Its already threatened habitat has been the stage of serious pressures, including the poaching and smuggling of this and other species for illegal trade. Unfortunately, funds to enforce conservation laws in Brazil are slim, so appropriate measures that could prevent such losses and provide guards, equipments and promote awareness are not prioritised among decision makers. Therefore, initiatives have greatly relied on the interests and inputs of individuals and local authorities that are personally involved in conservation matters, on groups that plan specific programmes to revert damaging situations and on institutions like the Loro Parque Fundación that believe and support conservation in all regions of the world in need of protection. 12 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 education in Superagüi Village, Paraná amazon, flagship of in Brazil Maria das Graças de Souza, Fabiana Prado and 13 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Boat trip to Superagüi Through environmental education, communities inhabiting the surroundings of natural areas can be given means to help face these challenges. The Island of Superagüi, which is part of the Superagüi National Park, represents a unique biological heritage that deserves all protection efforts. Reasons to focus on this site are plenty. Its unique beauty would already be a powerful reason, but it is today the last significant remnant of Atlantic Forest in the State of Paraná, B razil. A s a c o n s e q u e n c e , ma n y r a r e a n d e n d a n g e r e d s p e c i e s d e p e n d o n t h e P a r k ’s protection for survival, including the Red-tailed Amazon, endemic to this region. The environmental education programme designed to involve local people has been conceptualised with a broad and inclusive approach. The objective is to give individuals opportunities to gain knowledge and shift values that include conservation of species so the entire natural area can be protected. It also aims at giving local people alternatives to improve their quality of life so they can stay in the region, value local nature and help protect it as a common wealth and a reason of pride. The goal is thus to empower and encourage local people to get involved in the protection of the Red-tailed parrot that will ultimately help protect all of its habitat. Poor people with low literacy level surround the Superagüi National Park. So the education programme, in addition to contributing to cognitive and affective gains, also deals with giving different groups new skills to implement sustainable alternatives, which range from artefacts and cooking innovations for women, to ecotourism practices for youngsters. Students learn through a variety of ways that include lectures, games and field trips. Adults participate in workshops on different themes, during which information is transmitted in an informal way. The education program has been utilizing an approach that has shown success elsewhere, which comprehends turning local charismatic species into conservation symbols. The Redtailed Amazon has all the appropriate characteristics to become a reason of pride. It is beautiful, rare and unique to the region. These factors can increase the chances of producing means to engage local communities in conservation matters and eventually get them to become active participants in issues that can positively impact their environment. The importance of the Atlantic Forest and the status of the species … The Brazilian Atlantic Forest has been largely destroyed and today it is among the most endangered ecosystems in the world. The forests that have survived are estimated to comprise 14 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 approximately 5% of its original cover and in many regions the loss has been even greater. The consequences are dramatic and have direct impacts on the outstanding biodiversity and the many endemic species that inhabit these forests. The Red-tailed Amazon is one of these endemic species, originally found along the coastal areas of São Paulo, Paraná and Santa Catarina States. The species was placed in national and international endangered species lists and the estimates for the known population lie between 2000 and 4000 parrots. The main factors affecting its survival are: habitat destruction; illegal trade; selective logging in their area of occurrence (mainly for building canoes); and even killing for food by local people. The need to reverse this destructive trend is imminent and that is why all efforts to achieve positive results need to be encouraged. The survival of the Red-tailed Amazon strongly depends on finding new and creative ways to face such challenges. For us, environmental education is among possible solutions and that is why we are testing and implementing different strategies to involve local communities and gain their support for conservation in a broad sense. fective gains, and have indicated the value of the experience. Together with another conservation institution, Sociedade de Proteção da Vida Silvestre e Educação Ambiental – SPVS, IPÊ’s education team was able to design modules on three different themes: the Red-tailed Amazon, the Atlantic forest and mangroves. More than 500 students of five surrounding villages participated in the activities. Education materials on these themes are now available to be continuously utilized. This initiative generated so much interest that teachers developed a number of additional activities. Map making is another method we are utilizing to better understand young people’s perceptions of local environmental problems and potentials, making it possible for teamwork to solve or minimize each aspect identified. A “diagnosis” map was already produced and the young participants will work on a second one in a few months so information can be compared. The idea is to encourage action and the implementation of solutions by the different groups, having them reflect, observe, identify and list What is being done … As the education programme’s aim is to turn the Red-tailed Amazon into a regional symbol of pride, the methods used have included strategies for different audiences, all providing opportunities to increase ecological knowledge and shift values so conservation can be effectively incorporated. We have been working with students and teenagers, as well as housewives. Fishermen are also targeted but in a more gradual pace as they demand specific attention. Among students and teenagers … For students and teenagers, activities include lectures, “hands-on” experiences and educational games. Field trips to natural habitats are the highlight of the programme, as local children do not commonly have opportunities to explore their natural surroundings. The idea is to trigger interest and sensitise youngsters through direct contact with nature. Among these trips is a boat ride to the parrots roosting site, for which a specific programme has been designed. Pre and post evaluations have helped assess cognitive and af- 15 Draft of a poster for the environmental education programme Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 also being introduced during cooking workshops. Women now have more options to offer tourists during the summer season, which is a way to improve their family revenue. The workshops occur during programmed afternoons and besides being learning opportunities serve as important social events. Prior to the education programme, women almost only left their homes to attend religious services. Therefore, the workshops are now anticipated events and are one of the most effective ways for the education team to become regionally accepted and supported. Besides fishing, fishermen … Fishing is almost the only local profession for Superagüi men. We have designed activities for fishermen such as craft exhibits and video presentations. Opportunities to disclose new talents are always welcome and exhibitors can become proud of becoming popular locally and among tourists. Some of these events end up attracting the entire families, as fishermen are frequently community leaders. Children are one of the main targets in the environmental education programme For all … what is wrong and what they can do themselves to help solve each problem. As they register their impressions on a map, they are learning to reflect, state their opinion and to evaluate their performance as solution agents after some time. Students also participate in producing art with environmental themes, exhibits and plays. In addition, they may in the future be skilled to become young rangers and tour guides during the summer season when visitation is plentiful. All education activities they are experiencing will serve as content base for more profound development. Housewives participate in … The great successes among local women are the thematic workshops we have designed. Embroidery, tapestry, puppet making and a variety of artefacts are turning the Red-tailed Amazon and other regional species into focuses of attention. As these handicrafts are being sold to tourists who visit the Island, the parrot and other natural elements are being valued among local people and also popularised to broader audiences. New fish, shrimp and dessert recipes are For the public in general, we are making the Red-tailed Amazon more popular through a series of publications A newsletter posted in commercial establishments tells details about the parrot and other local values. A poster is turning the parrot even more visible, as it shows its beauty and also common problems it faces. A folder about the programme helps people better understand and appreciate the natural wonders of Superagüi. Spots for local radios disseminates information to the general public and especially for tourists the education team is giving talks and showing videos at the different lodges about the parrots. Strong partnerships emerged from the education programme. IBAMA, the federal environmental institution has supported the education team in ways that are unprecedented. All education activities occur at IBAMA’s headquarters in the Island. A formal partnership is now about to be signed so the programme’s continuity is not threatened. Another important partnership is with SPVS, an institution that has been working in regional conservation for almost two decades. The education teams of both IPÊ and SPVS have 16 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 (Left) Paintings, one of the earliest human ways of expression, are a good resource to involve the children with conservation goals. (Right) Redtailed Amazon (Amazona brasiliensis). been working together to spread the successful experiences to other villages. In that way we hope to reach a far greater number of people, especially the ones living in communities near the parrots’ roosting sites. Conclusions The impact of the education programme is unquestionable, as local people now know more about and recognize the importance of having the parrot in their backyard. Their interest in conservation matters has clearly increased, making it smooth and easy to work with individuals and groups. During this past year, in several occasions local people denounced illegal trade vestiges like flashlights at the parrots’ nesting sites and twice they handed over to IPÊ’s team parrots they apprehended so appropriate measures could be sought. This indicates people’s concern and interest in conservation matters and also confidence in the education team. As education is a process, time and continuous inputs are crucial to increase local people’s awareness about conservation and to 17 motivate them to participate and become active protectors of nature. Information transfer and value shifts are essential to raise people’s sense of pride and self-esteem. The identification and the valuing of cultural traditions and natural environments can trigger more in-depth empowerment processes that will hopefully result in behaviours that are in balance with a sustainable livelihood. We have to thank many individuals and institutions: the programme has received support from Guadalupe Vivekananda (Director of the Superagüi National Park - IBAMA), Dr Pedro Scherer Neto (researcher), Roland Wirth, the SPVS team, the Dresden Zoo and the American Bird Conservancy/Disney Wildlife Conservation Fund. We would especially like to thank the Loro Parque Fundación, that in addition to being one of the two principal funding agents has supported our ideas and regularly contributed to the design and implementation of the programme. Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 The Yellow-eared Parrot: good news and an unexpected danger By P aul Salaman Paul The plot is all too familiar: a specialist species slips unnoticed to the brink of extinction; a last ditch effort is made to save it from joining the sad plight of the Spixs macaw. Like a good movie, there are some unexpected twists to the old plot: a revolutionary guerrilla movement lends a helping hand, whilst Catholic traditions pose an unwitting danger to the survival of the Yellow-eared Parrot. The Yellow-eared Parrot Ognorhynchus icterotis, once abundant across the high Andes of Colombia and Ecuador, silently slipped towards the precipice of extinction before our attention was attracted to its frightening fate in the mid 1990s. In 1996, Niels Krabbe, the leading Andean ornithologist, together with Loro Parque Foundation, alerted the world to the parrot’s critical situation. This year, despite their best efforts, Niels sadly declared this enigmatic parrot extinct in Ecuador after three years of unsuccessful searches. The unthinkable had happened in Ecuador, and efforts to locate a possible surviving population in the Colombian Andes by “Proyecto Ognorhynchus” looked increasingly bleak. That was until April 1999, when a population of 81 birds was located in remote valleys in the Central Andes of Colombia (see Cyanopsitta 1999 53/54). All our hopes were pinned on this population and immediately an intensive research and conservation programme commenced. Proyecto Ognorhynchus initiated three principal activities for saving the Yellow-eared Parrot: research to understand the reasons for the species fragility; protection – to secure the safety of surviving individuals; and community liaison – to ensure a long-term harmonious relationship between local people and the conservation of the parrot. Conservation activities have included, for example, fencing large enclosures of the remaining forest to protect palm seedlings from cattle browsing, installing artificial nest boxes, and promoting wall murals of the parrot in towns and schools. In March 2001, we managed to salvage a dead palm that was being cut down for fence posts. The palm had a nesting pair of parrots and a rather perturbed chick. We were able to film the chick inside the palm hollow and thankfully the chick successfully fledged in April. The protection afforded by the project and involvement of the community have had immediate effects, with a steady increase in the number of pairs breeding and successfully raising broods. This year we had a further significant increase in the breeding population; since 26 pairs nested and at least 13 pairs successfully raised an average two chicks per nest, which fledged in April. From 81 birds the population has increased to 110 birds in September 2000 and approximately 130 individuals presently. The project field team has been instrumental in spreading news of the Yellow-eared Parrot’s plight throughout Colombia, with various newspaper articles, posters disseminated, and public talks. Just after one such seminar in late 2000, a member of the audience Juan Lazaro Toro- heard descriptions from local people in western Colombia of a parrot not dissimilar to the Yellow-eared Parrot. Following-up these reports on January 2nd 2001, Juan Lazaro with project coordinator Alex Cortés located two flocks of Yellow-eared Parrots totalling 63 individuals. This major breakthrough was Wax palms grow at an exceedingly slow rate. The one in the photo is 40 years old (Paul Salaman/Proyecto Ognorhynchus). 18 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 especially important for the species as the site represents a considerable extension of the previously known range in the Western Andes. The project again immediately implemented a research and conservation team, funded by Loro Parque Foundation and working with CorAntioquia (regional environmental agency). Currently, we are searching for the roost site and other potential nesting areas, which to date remain a mystery. By March progress was fully underway in the second area, with a field team monitoring the population and undertaking a conservation assessment for the species. Rapidly it became apparent that this population was critically threatened, and as had happened in Ecuador, the wax palms –upon which the parrot relies- were being felled at a phenomenal rate. The scarcity of the wax palm in this study area was already of great concern. Prompt action from CorAntioquia secured a large forested highland area of 2,000 hectares as a watershed protected reserve for four local authorities, as it also provides drinking water for thousands of local inhabitants. This was partly fenced in March when two active parrot nests were found. Then our worst nightmares were realised on a sunny Palm Sunday morning in the local town. Wax palms (Ceroxylon) -Colombia’s national tree and a critical endangered species- grow at an exceedingly slow rate. For example the first appearance of the trunk takes 50 years. Mature wax palms are the tallest palms in the world, towering over 60 metres in height, with today’s giant specimens being seedlings when Christopher Columbus first walked the shores of the Americas. Mature wax palms are essential as roosting, feeding and nesting sites for the Yellow-eared Parrot. In effect, the future of the wax palms is inextricably linked with that of the parrot. Across the world, Palm Sunday is popularly celebrated with palm frond-waving parades. Unfortunately, the wax palm is the favoured palm frond for this procession in most towns in the Colombian Andes. In anticipation of the ceremony, CorAntioquia approached the local priest to explain that the law protects the wax palm, and that he should encourage his congregations to use alternatives such as the very common Wettinia palm. Worryingly, the day before Palm Sunday we found an ancient wax palm cut down near the nest site and within the newly fenced-off reserve. The destruction of this great tree would yield just four or five tender emerging fronds for the dreaded parade. Palm Sunday came and our hearts cried as an endless sea of waving palm fronds rounded the corner on the approach to the church. We estimated that half of the 800-strong crowd, dressed in their Sunday best, was proudly waving wax palm fronds. That means that around 100 wax palms had been massacred for the procession before ending up in the gutter. The longevity of the few hundred surviving wax palms scattered on the mountains towering around the town now seems startlingly short. Although the police had been advised of the legally protected status of the palm, they too were carrying fronds! Antioquia’s Palm Sunday parade, with people carrying wax palm fronds (Paul Salaman/Proyecto Ognorhynchus). Ironically, Palm Sunday parades in the area of the first discovered population in the Central Andes do not use the wax palm fronds as the guerrilla group FARC, active in the area, forbids the felling of live palms. In this second site Proyecto Ognorhynchus is now intensifying environmental awareness and conservation activities with local communities to avoid a repeat of the unnecessary destruction of wax palms for Palm Sunday. It is earnestly hoped that the Catholic Church can be instrumental in reconciling the conservation of Colombia’s national tree with the upholding of its Catholic traditions. The past two years of intensive research and conservation efforts by the project, with the support of Loro Parque Foundation and the American Bird Conservancy, have greatly already reversed the fortunes of the species, but great uncertainties still lie ahead for the Yellow-eared Parrot. 2001 has already yielded a mixed bag of hope and fear for the future survival of parrot. Clearly much more work is desperately needed to ensure the future survival of both the Yellow-eared Parrot and the majestic wax palm. 19 Request for help we are making a request for the donation of used binoculars, which are needed for ecological groups of young people in the study areas and for a community parrot observation scheme. For further information email: salaman@proaxis.com Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Last chance for an integral protected area on Tanimbar (Indonesia) The Goffin Cockatoo and Blue-streaked Lory still safe A typical local fishers’ village in Tanimbar islands In Cyanopsitta 58 we informed you about a new project of Loro Parque Fundación: Conservation of endemic parrots in the Tanimbar islands. Now, one year later, the first phase of the project has concluded. The focus of the activities was to determine the status, habitat use and traffic in the Goffin cockatoo (Cacatua goffini) and the Bluestreaked lory (Eos reticulata), especially on Yamdena, the main island, but also the other islands of the archipelago of Tanimbar. The census had as objective an update of the data available from the year 1994 and was organized in two separate visits to the island: May - July and October - November 2000. The opportunity was used to obtain data on vegetation and land use, logging concessions, traffic in birds, and other questions evolving around the use of natural resources in the area. The Goffin cockatoo was registered on all of the seven islands of the archipelago: Yamdena, which is the largest (and holds the largest part of the population), Larat, Sera, Wuliara, Selu, Wotar y Selaru. Both species were found in all the four sites which were sampled systematically in Yamdena. The Goffin cockatoo and the Blue-streaked lory were found to be relatively frequent in primary forest, but somewhat less frequent in forest degraded due to selective logging. The traffic in both species has dramatically diminished in the last two years due to social unrest in 1999, although traffic continues to a small degree; there is no local market for these birds, however, they are sold to tourists or are being exported. The major threats that both parrot species face at present are the systematic destruction of their habitat through illegal logging and unsustainable issuance of logging concessions, as well as the need to feed the illegal traffic of parrots. Although the western part of Mangroves are the common ecosystem along the coast 20 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Indonesia contains a large number of protected areas, very few protected areas exist on the Moluccan islands and in particular in the Tanimbar islands. The study conducted over the last year aims to establish in the long term protected areas in the Tanimbar archipelago, as this is the most effective measure to prevent illegal logging and the capture of birds for trade. The results of the project implemented by BirdLife International Indonesia Programme show that the populations of both species are stable. It appears that both the Goffin cockatoo and the Blue- streaked lory can compensate the loss of numbers both from natural mortality and from illegal traffic. However, this surprisingly positive outcome must not result in complacency. The recent autonomy of the archipelago, the deficient economy of the region and the limited technical qualification of the personnel working in the management of natural resources bring about the fear that a series of bad decisions in the future may lead to deficient land use planning and consecutive degradation of natural resources. Consequently, the authors of the final project report, Yan E. Persulessy and David Purmiasa, provide a number of recommendations which should be taken into consideration in the efforts to protect both the endemic parrots and the general biodiversity of the region: To develop activities such that the communities are made aware of the value and the importance of the natural resources on Tanimbar, from the environmental point of view and the economic. At the same time, that they’re able to recognize the threats Poaching continues to represent a problem for the Goffin cockatoo that these natural resources face, and enable them to act in a consistent manner to protect their natural environment. Special activities to raise awareness about the populations of Goffin cockatoo and Blue-streaked lory. Current parrot field conservation projects of Loro Parque Fundación: * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Brazil: Spixs Macaw Cyanopsitta spixii Recovery Programme Brazil: Environmental Education Programme for the Red-tailed Amazon Amazona brasiliensis in Superagüi National Park, Paraná Bolivia: Blue-throated Macaw Ara glaucogularis Conservation Ecuador: Conservation of the Yellow-eared Parrot Ognorhynchus icterotis I Colombia: Conservation of the Yellow-eared Parrot Ognorhynchus icterotis II Dominica: Conservation of the endemic Red-necked and Imperial amazons Belize: Scarlet Macaw Outreach Program Zambia: Status, Ecology and Conservation Biology of the Black-cheeked Lovebird Agapornis nigrigenis Zambia/Zimbabwe: Conservation Status and Biology of the Greyheaded Parrot Poicephalus fuscicollis suahelicus Thailand: Phu Khieo Wildlife Sanctuary Philippines: Red-vented Cockatoo Cacatua haematuropygia Conservation Programme Philippines: Construction of parrot aviaries in two wildlife rescue centres in West Visayas Indonesia: Action Sampiri - Conservation of Endangered Parrot Species on the Sangihe & Talaud Islands Indonesia: Conservation of Endemic Parrots on the Tanimbar Islands Mauritius: Echo parakeet conservation programme 21 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 It appears necessary to disseminate information about the CITES regulations among the local communities such that they understand the importance to avoid activities in support of illegal trade and at the same time strengthen activities directed towards enforcement of existing laws. The collaboration between the provincial government and the Forestry Department must be improved so that a strict supervision of logging activities and the issuing of logging concessions and the attempt to eliminate such sort of activities. Special attention must be given to efforts to establish a large protected area on Yamdena to protect in an effective manner the archipelago’s biodiversity. A multidisciplinary programme must be designed to determine the boundaries of this protected area; it should take into consideration ecological requirements, the actual land use of local communities and the plans of government authorities in the field of development. It is essential that all these aspects are looked after, such that eventual boundaries are a result of a general consensus between all involved parties with the aim that they receive general support and that the longterm conservation of the protected area is made possible. Lastly, special efforts must be directed to align the new protected area with the development plan of the Kabupaten Maluku Tenggara Barat district, that is still being developed by the respective authorities. It is certainly revealing that the last recommendation submitted by BirdLife International Indonesia Programme emphasises the need for the establishment of a protected area that encompasses a representative portion of the region’s biodiversity. It reflects the fact that few such areas exist at present, Exploitation of forest resources is the principal threat to biodiversity in the archipelago that they cover only a small area and were mainly established to ensure the conservation of the Larat orquid, the latter leading to a poor representation of the island’s ecosystems. In addition, the current protected areas are not managed effectively and face serious exploitative pressures from outside. The current conservation measures are not directed to protect the forest and marine ecosystems which are those which face the largest conservation problems. In sum, although the conservation status of the endemic parrots of the Tanimbar islands does not give reason for concern, the general situation and the current environmental policies imply that in a few years the biodiversity of the region may be endangered. This is a last and unique opportunity to define a protected area that allows to conserve and manage the natural wealth of the archipelago. Without a doubt, the research supported by LPF will be a very useful tool when it comes to define the limits and characteristics it should have. Members of the field team on Tanimbar 22 Cyanopsitta No. 61 - June 2001 Sponsors and Donors ofS L oro P arque F undación Loro Parque Fundación Therefore, the financial support provided by our sponsors, members and donors can be dedicated entirely to our conservation projects. Loro Parque is the Foundation’s principal sponsor and covers its most important expenditures such as salaries and administration costs. Over 30.000 Euros Over 5.000 Euros Up to 5.000 Euros EMCADISA, PANALU, REDISA, Vogelfreunde Achern, Verein der Vogelfreunde Iserlohn, HARIBO, Emerencio e Hijos, La Oficina, Georg Fischer, CITA, BETACAR, Malinda Chouinard, Grupo CODORNIU, GRUMBACH, Agencia Guimerá, ROHERSA, Rotary Club Distrito 2200, MRW, Artecolor, Cash and Carry, Manuel Fraga Alba, Verein für Vogelliebhaber Kevelaer, MATUTANO, Viajes Santa Lucía, Kanarien- u. Exotenzuchtverein Forchheim 1963, Carolyn Debuse & Kim Fondrk, CAVAS CATALANAS, CELGAN, Bernd Wolber, Gisele Tiemann. Donations since January 2000 We want to thank all our sponsors and donors 23