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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2003/7/8/features/5778735 & sec=fe\

atures

 

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Tuesday, July 08, 2003

Macaw magic

By GREG BROSNAN

 

Rare macaws are in peril as the Guatemalan jungle shrinks, GREG BROSNAN reports.

 

ITS SURVIVAL threatened by illegal settlers and poachers, a rare type of scarlet

macaw living in the Guatemalan jungle has lost some of its few protectors.

 

Biologists working for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) have been pulled

out of the colourful bird & #8217;s main nesting area in fear of armed men

believed to be land settlers who burn the jungle to clear land for cattle or

homes.

 

On May 29, five men who were probably land invaders, dressed in dark clothes

and armed with shotguns and rifles, tried to set a trap for two WCS biologists

during their rounds. The two escaped by fleeing through thick bush.

 

 

 

“Not even the law of the jungle applies here,” said Rodrigo Morales, a

biologist and macaw specialist with the Guatemalan environmental group Defenders

of Nature.

 

Environmentalists say a rare sub-species of scarlet macaw native to virgin

jungle in southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize and Honduras is being wiped out as

settlers burn down its habitat to make room for crops, poachers steal valuable

chicks and the authorities turn a blind eye.

 

Scarlet macaws exist in other countries, such as Brazil and Costa Rica, but

those in southern Mexico and northern Central America have been isolated for so

long that most scientists consider them a sub-species, known by the scientific

name ara Macao cyanoptera.

 

Famed for their bright red plumage streaked with yellow and blue, Central

American scarlet macaws mate for life.

 

According to Macaws Without Borders, a conservation group dedicated to

protecting the bird, there could now be as few as 600 left in the wild.

 

“We & #8217;re talking about 40 nests perched on the edge of extinction,” said

Florida-born environmentalist Roan McNab, director in Guatemala of the WCS,

which also runs New York & #8217;s Bronx Zoo. “This is the absolute wild west,” he

said of the main Guatemalan nesting ground for the rare birds in Laguna del

Tigre national park in the country & #8217;s lawless northern Peten department.

 

 

 

Most of Peten, which makes up a third of Guatemala, was virgin jungle until

only a few decades ago but forest fires are rapidly turning protected areas into

a dust bowl. The worst forest fires in years ravaged much of the Laguna del

Tigre park earlier this year before rains began in May.

 

Some fires spread from nearby farms practising “slash and burn” agriculture

while others are started by land grabbers who environmentalists say are often

sponsored by large landowners seeking to expand territory for rearing cattle.

The area is also a major corridor for cocaine smuggling and illegal migrants

heading to the United States.

 

Magali Rey of the Guatemalan environmental group Madre Selva (Mother Jungle)

said powerful local interests sought to turn Peten into “one enormous pasture.”

 

Before being run out of the area, biologist Jeovani Tut monitored an artificial

nest which was home to the only known hatchling this season in the

species & #8217; main nesting area. On one visit, Tut peered into the nest

balanced high above the ground in a tree towering over miles of pristine jungle.

 

“It & #8217;s beautiful!” he cried out to colleagues waiting 9m below at the

sight of the lone chick, a tattered ball of red, yellow and blue feathers that

squawked loudly at his intrusion.

 

Before being pulled off the job, Tut had been prepared to camp under the tree

where the chick had hatched until it could fly, to scare away falcons and human

predators.

 

Poachers, who use crampons to climb trees and sometimes carry machine-guns,

sell chicks for hundreds of dollars. Resource-starved police are helpless

against them and last year officers in another part of Peten were caught

smuggling chicks themselves. Human encroachment into previously isolated areas

has also wrought havoc on the natural food chain.

 

Driven in greater numbers into macaw nesting grounds as forests shrink,

predators such as falcons are grabbing more chicks.

 

As species concentrate in the remaining pockets of jungle, macaws, which have

low reproduction rates, have to compete for nests with other birds, mammals and

bees that hijack prime spots. Biologists fasten nests to trees to try to entice

the macaws to mate.

 

“If we lose this area, we & #8217;ve lost the macaw,” said WCS biologist Rony

Garcia. & #8211; Reuters<p>

 

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