Dominica Parrot Rescue Update: Jacos In Rehab

The Dominica Forestry, Wildlife, and Parks Division has generously granted permission to share an early December update here re the ongoing efforts to rehabilitate Red-necked amazons in the wake of Hurricane Maria. Each bird is crucial to rebuilding the population of this native Dominican parrot in the coming years. Thanks to Stephan Durand, Dr. Erika Flores, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), and to everyone involved with the daily care of these precious survivors of Maria’s wrath. jaco pair

A gorgeous pair of Jaco parrots aka Red-necked amazons in rehab. Aren’t they beautiful? All of these rehabilitated birds will be released back to the wild, whenever possible, as soon as their initial injuries heal.

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A Jaco parrot in recovery after surgery to his left wing

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Dr. Erika Flores of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), treating an injured Jaco brought in by a farmer from the north of the island. IFAW was founded in 1969, with projects operating today in 40 countries. The organization deployed a team to Dominica soon after Maria struck the island.

Dr Erika Flores from the IFAW teamDr. Flores observes the progress of Jacos in rehab

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A Jaco post-surgery, just after a tumor was removed from underneath his right eye

Stephen Durand w Dr FloresStephen Durand of the Forestry Department discusses ongoing parrot care and conservation with Dr. Flores.

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Recovering Jacos. Sadly, no surviving Sisserous have been brought in to rehab, post-Maria. I will continue to post updates here as I receive news. Thanks for dropping by– and for your interest in the future of Dominica’s precious native parrots.

All photos courtesy of Dominica’s Forestry, Wildlife, and Parks Division

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In Search of the Sisserou: A Q&A Interview Along The Syndicate Trail

Thanks to Emonews Emonews for the new video from Dominica, featuring an interview with former Forestry Department officer Bertrand along the Syndicate Trail in the foothills of Morne Diablotin National Park. Have you seen the Sisserou Parrot post-Maria? What if the Sisserou Parrot goes extinct due to Maria? What effect would this have on Dominica’s national heritage? The interview covers these questions and more. Hope you’ll have a listen!

Jaco Photos and News of a Surviving Sisserou Pair: An Update from Karl Watson

Many thanks to Karl Watson for permission to share his updates from Barbados here. His latest news, first posted on the Wild Caribbean Facebook page, includes word of a surviving Sisserou pair, as follows:

As promised, I said I would post some Dominica pictures after Dr Lennox Honychurch came to Barbados. These are some of his photographs. They tell a bittersweet story of coastal regeneration and survival, contrasted with a broken and destroyed interior. They follow a specific order.

1Red necked parrots feeding on the seed pods of the West Indian white cedar.

5A drone shot of Dr Honychurch’s property at Turtle Point, Woodford Hill, where the Red-necked parrots have gathered. Don’t be fooled by the apparent greenery of the cliff area around his house. Zoom in on the mountains in the back. This is the Morne Diablotin range. Seven weeks after Maria, the area looks as if an atom bomb had been dropped on it. I don’t know if the environmental damage caused by this natural disaster can ever properly be assessed, but the destruction of the wildlife in this vast and completely devastated area must have been enormous. This is the heartland of wild Dominica, the prime habitat of the Imperial parrot.

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Next follows a close up of the Emerald Pool area at the top of the Castle Bruce valley.  I wish I had a before picture of this area to fully emphasize the horror of Maria’s destruction. 

7A photograph of broken, twisted vegetation. See if you can pick out the parrots among the broken limbs!

8The final photograph shows two Red necked parrots among the broken branches.

Dr Honychurch has confirmation from Jem Winston of the survival of a pair of Imperial parrots in the Three Rivers area on the eastern slopes of Morne Trois Pitons…He has asked a multiplicity of sources/observers including officials of the Forestry Department and workmen of the DOWASCO (water authority) who have been working in the headwaters of several of Dominica’s rivers and are therefore in a position to observe any passing parrots.

Dr Honychurch’s last words of hope are : “Dominica has vast, inaccessible areas where Imperial parrots could still remain unseen.” So let us not yet write them off as a species. They have survived past hurricanes….. maybe enough Sisserou have survived the fury of Maria to save them from certain extinction. It would be a tragedy if this bird was to disappear as so many other West Indian bird species have.

Thank you, Karl! News of a surviving Sisserou pair does indeed offer reason for hope. Keep the updates coming.

To read about the November 8 documentation of a lone Sisserou at Morne Saint Mary south of Roseau, click here.

Prince Charles Visits Dominica Nov 19: Royal Tweets and Video Updates from the Office of the Prime Minister

His Royal Highness Charles, Prince of Wales, recently toured Irma and Maria devastation in the Caribbean region over a three day official visit. After surveying damage to Antigua, Barbuda, and the British Virgin Islands Nov 17-18, Prince Charles arrived on Dominica on Sunday, November 19, inspecting Hurricane Maria’s catastrophic impact, meeting island residents, and attending a government cabinet meeting with Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit.

Fullscreen capture 11212017 95000 AMPrior to departure, the Prince stated: “If I may say, I have been so full of admiration for the remarkable courage and resilience of people in Dominica…we are all trying to do our best to support this very important part of the Commonwealth, and I hope everybody has the happiest Christmas as possible. ”

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The UK’s International Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt joined the Prince on his Caribbean visit, announcing that Britain will give Dominica an additional £12 million for recovery efforts.

 

 

 

“And so it was painful beyond words to see the devastation that was so cruelly wrought across the Caribbean by Hurricanes Irma and Maria in those few, terrible weeks in September.”– HRH Charles, Prince of Wales

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