ABOUT

Yellow-eared Parrot Habitat Protection

Status:
Past
A wild Yellow-eared Conure feeds on berries
© Felix Uribe [CC BY-NC 2.0] via Flickr
Collaborators/Funders:

Proyecto Ognorhynchus (ProAves Colombia), Conservation International, World Land Trust, World Land Trust-USA

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The Yellow-eared Parrot (Ognorhynchus icterotis) has been impacted by loss of habitat. It has lost over 90% of its habitat in Colombia alone.

The WPT joined the American Bird Conservancy (ABC) to support research into the ecology of the species, surveys, active protection of habitat and educating local communities.

In the mid-1990s, the World Parrot Trust, The American Bird Conservancy, The World Land Trust, World Land Trust-USA and others funded Proyecto Ognorhynchus, of ProAves Colombia. These funds aided critical fieldwork, helped purchase crucial habitat in Ecuador, and have helped in the education and involvement of local people in the preservation of the Yellow-eared Parrot. Intensive conservation efforts had brought the population up to 2600 individuals by 2019.

Status: IUCN Endangered / CITES Appendix I

Population: 2600

Range: Yellow-eared Parrots are found in the Andean highlands in NW Ecuador, north from Pichincha and W Cotopaxi, and W Colombia, north to Antioquia and NW Norte de Santander. Recently found only from degraded localities in Cordillera Central, Colombia, and W Cotopaxi, Ecuador.

Natural history:  The Yellow-eared Parrot prefers areas with Ceroxylon wax palm trees in upland humid mountain forest and will tolerate only partially cleared areas, so important is the wax palm in its overall ecology.  They reportedly feed on Ceroxylon quindiuense and C. alpinum, and possibly fruit from other species in this genus, and fruits of Sanurania and Sapium spp.  These birds are active at dawn feeding in small flocks, or during the breeding season, in pairs. Larger numbers are found when the birds return to roost in mid-afternoon.