Above: a portrait of a Kirtland’s warbler wintering on Eleuthera Island, Bahamas (Photo: Dave Currie)
Live

Protecting a Rare Caribbean Songbird

By: Caribbean Journal Staff - August 17, 2015

By Dave Ewert
CJ Contributor

The Kirtland’s warbler, one of North America’s rarest songbirds, is very picky about where it calls home.

It migrates a long distance to winter in The Bahamas every year after breeding each summer in young jack pine stands in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ontario, its exclusive breeding area.

The restricted habitats in which it resides in both North America and The Bahamas have inspired multi-national interest in protecting both the summer and winter habitats of this endangered songbird.

The Kirtland’s Warbler Research and Training Project was established in 2002 as a joint effort that transcends borders, involving The Nature Conservancy, the International Program of the United States Forest Service, the International Institute of Tropical Forestry of the United States Forest Service, Bahamas National Trust, and the Puerto Rico Conservation Foundation.

Participants in the program received training in bird identification, bird banding and census techniques, and habitat conservation.

Discoveries by these researchers demonstrate that the Kirtland’s warbler prefers areas in which black torch, wild sage, and snowberry are abundant and that Kirtland’s warblers are most common on Eleuthera, Long and Cat Islands, and San Salvador, in The Bahamas.

In its summer habitats in North America, the bird is almost entirely restricted to jack pine forests. As a result of the intensive protection and management of 219,000 acres of forest in the Kirtland’s Michigan breeding grounds, there has been an increase from a mere 171 singing males found in the mid-1980s to over 2,300 recorded in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ontario in 2015.

However, it hasn’t been enough to protect the bird’s breeding grounds; conservation of its wintering grounds in The Bahamas is also critical.

The research and training project has piqued the interest of local Bahamians interested in protecting the bird and its winter habitat.

Four Bahamian alumni of the project are now active conservationists in The Bahamas and more Bahamians are obtaining additional training.

As with the approximately 110 bird species that migrate between North America and the Caribbean, the Kirtland’s warbler’s survival remains highly dependent upon further intensive habitat protection across its migration route and in its Caribbean home.

Although conservation efforts for the Kirtland’s warbler have had significant progress, there is still considerable work to be done.

The bird, bridging geographies that aren’t intuitively connected, is a perfect illustration of why a global perspective on conservation is so important.

Dave Ewert is a biologist for The Nature Conservancy in Michigan. 

Popular Posts cape santa maria

From Anguilla to Aruba, the Best Caribbean Beaches to Visit This Summer

Forget the Hamptons, forget Santorini. And Florida? There’s a reason snowbirds go home in the summer. If you’re looking for a summertime beach getaway, the Caribbean is it. The water is deliciously warm, the trade winds keep you cool and […]


From Belize to Grenada, 10 Little Caribbean Beach Resorts to Visit Right Now 

karibuni

There are different resorts for different vacations, different tastes, different moods. For some, there’s something delicious about a pint-sized, tiny Caribbean resort, where the emphasis is on the intimate, the serene. Where the soundtrack isn’t a piped-in DJ set, but […]


The Winners of the 2024 Caribbean Green Awards 

caribbean green

With almost 20,000 votes, the winners of the Caribbean Green Awards 2024 Presented by E-Finity have been crowned.  From state-of-the-art marine conservation projects to hotels that are redefining sustainability, the Green movement has never been stronger in the Caribbean.  “This […]


Related Posts long island rum punch

Rum Journal: Forget Iced Tea. In The Bahamas, It’s Long Island Rum Punch. 

There’s not another soul at the bar. On far-off Long Island in Out Islands of The Bahamas, that’s not exactly a surprise.  But even with no one around to hear, Gerald still won’t reveal the secret.  I take a sip, […]


Caribbean Photo of the Week: Diving in Cayman Brac 

cayman brac fish diving underwater

The latest Caribbean Photo comes from Caribbean Journal reader Dave Lowther, who sent in this lovely shot taken while diving on the south side of Cayman Brac in the Cayman Islands.  Have you taken a great photo in the Caribbean?  […]


Grand Hyatt Is Opening a New Resort in Cancun 

grand hyatt in cancun

It’s been nearly a decade since the first Grand Hyatt opened its doors in the Mexican Caribbean. Now, another one is coming to the region’s most popular destination.  Next year, Grand Hyatt will be debuting the new Grand Hyatt Cancun, […]


SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for Caribbean Journal's free newsletter for a daily dose of beaches, hotels, rum and the best Caribbean travel information on the net.


No. Thank You