New directory finds Caribbean bird habitats lack protection
| Caribbean Net News | |
| Published on Tuesday, November 4, 2008 | |
| CAMBRIDGE, England: Of the 770 bird species occurring in the Caribbean, 148 are endemic, with 105 confined to single islands. But only around 10 percent of the region’s original habitat remains, and 54 of the Caribbean’s bird species are globally threatened, of which 12 are Critically Endangered. BirdLife's newly-published Important Bird Areas of the Caribbean: key sites for conservation [1] is a milestone for the BirdLife Caribbean Programme, which began in 2001. BirdLife International and its Partners, and a range of other organisations, have identified, documented and mapped 283 internationally significant Important Bird Areas (IBAs) in the Caribbean. IBAs are key sites for the conservation of birds and biodiversity, and the building blocks for conservation planning. They are identified nationally, using data gathered locally and applying internationally agreed criteria.
But this Caribbean network of key sites faces a large number of diverse threats, and among the book's most disturbing findings is that 43% are wholly outside formal protected areas.
The Caribbean region as covered by this book includes Bermuda and all islands of the Bahamas, Greater Antilles (Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica and Puerto Rico), Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Lesser Antilles, Netherlands Antilles, and Trinidad and Tobago. This represents 13 independent nations, and six UK, six Dutch, and three US overseas territories, two French overseas départements and two French overseas collectivités. |
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