The Mercury E-dition

Conservation of South Africa’s only endemic parrot

CHRISTINE CUÉNOD

THE work of Professor Colleen Downs, South African Research Chair (SARChI) in ecosystem health and biodiversity in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape, is a touchstone for efforts to conserve South Africa’s only endemic parrot species: the Cape Parrot (Poicephalus robustus).

Downs is a University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) lecturer and Chair of the Cape Parrot Working Group (CPWG), which was initiated at the then University of Natal in 1998 to promote conservation of the Cape Parrot.

In 2019, BirdLife South Africa appointed the CPWG and the Wild Bird Trust’s Cape Parrot Project (CPP) in Hogsback as species guardians for the Cape Parrot.

The work of the CPWG and the CPP recently formed the content of a public webinar hosted by BirdLife South Africa, where the CPP’s Dr Kate Carstens joined Downs to discuss efforts to conserve the parrots. These include the restoration of habitats, establishment of community projects and the undertaking of key research projects.

Downs and Carstens, who are co-chairs of the Cape Parrot and Mistbelt Forest Conservation Action Plan, discussed the habitats, feeding, breeding and behaviour of the parrots, as well as major threats faced by the species. The discussion also highlighted the success of initiatives to conserve these birds and their habitats.

The Cape Parrot, a habitat specialist, is listed as endangered. It is vulnerable to the impacts of habitat fragmentation and loss, as it depends on Afromontane Yellowwood mistbelt forests for its diet and nesting areas. Only 4% of South Africa comprises natural forest, and anthropogenic impacts threaten these. Fewer than 1 600 Cape Parrots remain in the wild, and they are also threatened by illegal hunting and capture, and disease.

The CPWG has hosted an annual Cape Parrot Big Birding Day for more than two decades to determine the population size and trends of this avian species. The initiative has produced research supporting the classification of the bird as its own species, and has garnered commercial support from Woolworths in the production of a shopping bag to

support conservation efforts.

A key component of the work of researchers in the CPWG and the CPP is the identification and protection of important bird and biodiversity areas (IBAs) in Limpopo, KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape, as saving its forest habitat is key to saving the species.

“We see the Cape Parrot as a flagship species for the conservation of these special mistbelt forests,” said Downs of the southern mistbelt forests, one of South Africa’s smallest, non-continuous forest biomes dominated by yellowwoods.

The CPP aims to restore 10 hectares of mistbelt forest in the Amathole Mountains by planting 3 000 indigenous seedlings each year – sourced from community projects established by the Cape Parrot Project.

They are also working on filling key knowledge gaps by conducting research on the species’ nesting sites, demographics and health, identifying critical forest patches, and establishing whether the Cape Parrot is successfully adjusting to feeding on exotic species by examining its diet.

TERTIARY TIMES

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2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://themercury.pressreader.com/article/281771337222439

African News Agency