Several decades ago, the wild population of Echo Parakeets (Alexandrinus eques) had plummeted due to severe deforestation, introduced mammals, and the effects of disease and severe storms.
In 1990, the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust (DWCT) invited the World Parrot Trust, along with the Mauritian government and the Mauritius Wildlife Foundation, to support Dr Carl Jones and his team to save the Echo Parakeet on Mauritius.
The team worked to protect and enhance nest sites and boxes, breed birds for release, manage the health of nestlings and encourage the production of more than one clutch per year. Additionally, there has been active management of the species’ remaining habitat.
The WPT made the species a priority and secured significant funding as well as providing logistical and other support. Due to the outstanding efforts of several organisations and dozens of individual contributors, after two decades of intensive management, the species has been brought from a low of 12 known individuals to more than 750.