Birds Caribbean [exclusive] [Cross-Platform]

The Sierra de Bahoruco National Park (Dominican Republic) and Blue and John Crow Mountains (Jamaica) serve as key biodiversity areas (KBAs). However, management efficacy varies due to funding deficits.

The Caribbean’s avifauna represents an evolutionary library written in feathers and song. While endemism is high, vulnerability is higher. The region sits at a crossroads: continued development pressures threaten to unravel millions of years of unique evolution, yet proven conservation tools exist. Future success depends on trans-boundary cooperation, local community engagement in ecotourism, and aggressive climate adaptation planning. birds caribbean

Over 75% of native Caribbean forests have been converted to sugar cane, coffee plantations, or urban development. The Imperial Woodpecker ( Campephilus imperialis )—once ranging in Cuba—is likely extinct due to logging and specimen collection. The Sierra de Bahoruco National Park (Dominican Republic)

The introduction of the Small Asian Mongoose ( Herpestes javanicus ) to control rats in sugar fields (1870s) led to catastrophic ground-nesting bird declines. The Jamaican Petrel ( Pterodroma caribbaea ) is now critically endangered (possibly extinct) due to mongoose predation. While endemism is high, vulnerability is higher

[Your Name] Date: April 14, 2026

| Island | Notable Endemic Species | Status (IUCN) | |----------------|---------------------------------------|----------------| | Cuba | Cuban Trogon ( Priotelus temnurus ) | Least Concern | | Jamaica | Jamaican Blackbird ( Nesopsar nigerrimus ) | Endangered | | Hispaniola | Ashy-faced Owl ( Tyto glaucops ) | Least Concern | | Puerto Rico | Puerto Rican Parrot ( Amazona vittata )| Critically Endangered |

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