by
J. Michael Meyers
National Biological Service
The Puerto Rican
parrot (Amazona vittata) had shared its habitat with the peaceful
Taino Indians for centuries before the arrival of European settlers
in the Caribbean.
Status and Trends
Upon arrival
of the Spanish in 1493, the Puerto Rican parrot lived in all major
habitats of Puerto Rico and the adjacent smaller islands of Culebra,
Mona, Vieques, and possibly the Virgin Islands (Snyder et al. 1987).
Parrots occupied eight major climax or old-growth forest types (Little
and Wadsworth 1964) that covered Puerto Rico and were interspersed
only by small, scattered, sandy, or marshy areas near the coast
(Snyder et al. 1987). Parrots nested in cavities of large trees
that were plentiful throughout the forests. Fertile, moist lowland
forests in the coastal plain as well as forested mountain valleys
contained much of the fruits and seeds necessary to feed a thriving
parrot population. The forests of Puerto Rico probably supported
a parrot population of 100,000-1,000,000 at the end of the 15th
century (Snyder et al. 1987; Wiley 1991).
Little habitat
change occurred in Puerto Rico during the first 150 years of European
settlement. By 1650 the Spanish population had increased to 880
(Snyder et al. 1987); parrots still occupied all major habitats
and were plentiful. During the next two centuries the human population
soared to almost 500,000, and clearing for agriculture, especially
in the lowlands, eradicated forests in Puerto Rico (Wadsworth 1949).
By 1836 reports by Moritz, a German naturalist, indicated that the
Puerto Rican parrot population had begun to decline (Snyder et al.
1987).
By 1900 the
human population had doubled to a million. About 76% of the land
area of Puerto Rico had been converted from forest to agriculture
(Snyder et al. 1987); less than 1% of the old-growth forest remained
after more than 400 years of European civilization. At this time,
the parrot population must have been low, but no data exist. By
1937 U.S. Forest Service (USFS) rangers estimated the Puerto Rican
parrot population at about 2,000 birds (Wadsworth 1949).
A few years
later, parrots were found only in the Luquillo Mountains, formerly
a forest reserve of the Spanish Crown and now managed by the USFS.
This area contained the last forest habitat suitable for Puerto
Rican parrots.
Population surveys
of the Puerto Rican parrot were not conducted until the 1950's.
Early estimates of the parrot population in Puerto Rico are based
on few written records and general observations (Snyder et al. 1987),
knowledge of the parrot's biology, and extrapolation of population
surveys conducted by Rodríguez-Vidal (1959). During the 1950's,
Rodríguez-Vidal of the Puerto Rico Department of Agriculture
and Commerce conducted the first extensive study of the Puerto Rican
parrot. He reported a population of 200 Puerto Rican parrots by
the mid-1950's. About 20 years later the population had dwindled
to 14 individuals that inhabited an isolated rain forest of the
Luquillo Mountains.
In 1968 Kepler,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), organized parrot surveys
by placing observers at strategic sites, including overlooks from
prominent rocks, road-cuts, and building roofs. Snyder et al. (1987)
improved the survey method in 1972 by constructing 10 treetop lookouts
in areas of major parrot use. Parrot surveys are conducted from
these platforms during the breeding season and pre- and postbreeding
season (Snyder et al. 1987). Observers collect information on parrot
numbers, directions, and their distance from the platform by the
time of day. By 1993 this treetop lookout system was expanded to
38 platforms (Vilella and García 1994).
In 1968 implementation
of the Puerto Rican Parrot Recovery Plan began; it is a cooperative
effort of scientists and managers of the Puerto Rico Department
of Environmental and Natural Resources, USFS (Caribbean National
Forest and International Institute of Tropical Forestry), USFWS
Puerto Rican Parrot Field Office, and the National Biological Service.
After the recovery program began, the parrot population increased
to 47 birds by 1989 (Wiley 1980; Lindsey et al. 1989; Meyers et
al. 1993); however, about 50% of the population was destroyed by
Hurricane Hugo that same year. A small population of 22- 24 individuals
remained in late 1989. Since then, the population recovered to 38-39
by early 1994 (F.J. Vilella, USFWS, personal communication). After
the hurricane, the number of successful nesting pairs increased
from a maximum of 5 to 6 pairs from 1991 to 1993 (Meyers et al.
1993; Vilella and García 1994).
Research and
Management
Puerto Rican
parrots declined in relation to the increasing human population.
Conversion of forests to agriculture and loss of forest habitat,
on which the species depended for food and nest cavities, was the
primary cause for decline. Shooting parrots for food or protection
of crops and capture for pets were secondary causes for decline.
The remnant parrot population in the Luquillo Mountains was further
stressed when trails and roads were created and when human uses
of the forest timber were encouraged in the early 1900's (Snyder
et al. 1987).
Storms before
the arrival of Europeans probably had little effect on the parrot
population because the population was more widespread, and hurricanes
tend to affect only a small geographic area. Severe hurricanes in
1898, 1928, 1932, and 1989 reduced small, now-isolated populations
even further. The apparent ability of the population to rebound
after these storms is suggested by increases in the parrot population
and in nesting pairs after Hurricane Hugo hit the island in 1989
(Meyers et al. 1993).
Intense research
and management strategies during the last 27 years have prevented
the extinction of the Puerto Rican parrot. Much of the effort to
rebuild the population has involved research and management of nesting
sites (Wiley 1980; Snyder et al. 1987; Lindsey et al. 1989; Wiley
1991). Predators, such as black rats (Rattus rattus) and pearly-eyed
thrashers (Margarops fuscatus), have been controlled (Snyder et
al. 1987). Bot fly (Philornis spp.) infestations of nestlings are
still a minor problem (Lindsey et al. 1989). Management of nests
by fostering captive-reared young into wild nests, guarding nests,
controlling honey bees (Apis mellifera), improving and maintaining
existing nest cavities, and creating enhanced nesting cavities should
increase the population of the Puerto Rican parrot (Wiley 1980;
Lindsey et al. 1989; Wiley 1991; Lindsey 1992; Vilella and García
1994).
Hurricanes will
continue to threaten the wild population of the Puerto Rican parrot.
Researchers estimate that storms equal to the intensity of Hugo
(sustained winds of 166 km/h or 104 mi/h) occur at least every 50
years in northeastern Puerto Rico (Scatena and Larsen 1991). The
risk of extinction caused by hurricanes will be reduced by establishing
a geographically separated wild population (USFWS 1987).
Introduced parrots
and parakeets are common in Puerto Rico, including some of the genus
Amazona. Monitored populations of these non-native birds have increased
from 50% to 250% during 1990-93 (J.M. Meyers, National Biological
Service, unpublished data). If they expand their ranges to include
older forests, these populations may pose a threat to the Puerto
Rican parrot by introducing diseases and by competing for resources.
At present, none of the introduced Amazona populations are found
near the Luquillo Mountains; however, orange-fronted parakeets (Aratinga
canicularis) have foraged and nested in these mountains at lower
elevations (J.M. Meyers, NBS, unpublished data).
As the Puerto
Rican parrot population increases, it is possible that suitable
nesting sites may limit population growth. Before this occurs, research
and management should concentrate on increasing the wild population.
The ability of the Puerto Rican parrot to expand its population
in a manner similar to the exotic parrots in Puerto Rico, in a variety
of natural and human-altered environments, should not be underestimated
and may be the key to its recovery.
For further
information:
J. Michael Meyers
National Biological Service
Patuxent Environmental
Science Center
PO Box N
Palmer, Puerto Rico 00721-0501 USA
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