ABOUT

Black-billed Amazon Surveys

Status:
Past
Wild Black-billed Amazons interact in a tree
© Neil Bowman from Getty Images via Canva
Collaborators/Funders:

American Bird Conservancy (ABC), Kyle Brown Legacy, Barbara Delano Foundation

View Species Profile

The Black-billed Amazon’s (Amazona agilis) population is being decimated by poaching and habitat loss due to forest clearance and hurricanes.

In collaboration with the American Bird Conservancy and the Kyle Brown Legacy WPT provided funding to study the distribution and population size of Jamaica’s Amazon parrots, including the Black-billed Amazon, in Cockpit County.

Since 1995, there have been studies to determine the species’ range, estimate population size, identify factors limiting reproduction and train local people in research methods and monitoring.

IUCN/CITES Status: Endangered / Appendix II

Population: 10,000 – 20,000

Range: C Jamaica, West Indies

Natural history: This species is found between 300-1200 m (984-3936 ft) in wet limestone forest; also found in agricultural plots in forest and cultivated areas at forest edge.  It feeds on seeds, fruits, berries, leaf buds and blossoms; also ripe plantain Musa, Cecropia, Ficus, Nectandra, Bryophyllum, Blighia sapida and Melia azedarach.  Birds are found in flocks of 6-40 individuals or more. They roost communally, rising at sunrise with much noise and high-flying, feeding in middle to upper storeys of the canopy and wandering locally according to food availability.