PROTECTING NEOTROPICAL
MIGRANTS IN THE ANDES: BUILDING A STRATEGIC PROTECTED AREA NETWORK

A total of 97 Neotropical migrant species occur across Ecuador and
Peru each year, including the threatened Cerulean Warbler. Many of
the critical areas and habitats that these migrants are so dependent
upon for overwintering are directly threatened by human destruction.
There is an urgent need to intensify
conservation attention on these critical areas and to design and
implement bi-national monitoring efforts of migrants so as to
directly assist national priorities and local management plans.
American Bird Conservancy’s (ABC) experienced, in-country partners,
Asociación Ecosistemas Andinos (ECOAN) in Peru and Fundación
Jocotoco in Ecuador, own a network of eight strategically located
private nature reserves. Taken as a whole, these reserves cover
8,885 ha and represent 12 Ecoregions across the Tropical Andes
Hotspot. Many are situated in the buffer zones of large
governmentally-created protected areas and all provide habitat for
significant non-breeding populations of Neotropical migrants. ABC is
working with our partners to expand their private reserve network,
with a particular emphasis on protecting additional sites for non-breeding
populations of Neotropical migrants, including the Cerulean Warbler.
We have identified important wintering and passage sites for
Cerulean Warbler and aim to initiate pilot conservation activities
for these species. Together, our team of reserve rangers and
coordinators will undertake the following: A) Protection of
Cerulean Warbler: focus on establishing a new protected area
specifically for the Cerulean Warbler in eastern Ecuador, at a core
wintering site for the species. We will also develop an Andean
Conservation Action Plan for the species. B) Protection and
restoration of bird habitat: build a strategic bi-national reserve
network for migrant and resident birds through protection of 20,485
ha, including the purchase of 1,500 ha and restoration of 100 ha.
C) Monitoring: establish an Andean migratory monitoring network at
14 permanent monitoring stations across Ecuador and Peru, focusing
on training reserve staff and monitoring migrants in our protected
areas. D) Community outreach and education: intensify local
education activities in and around each reserve and nearby protected
areas, with activities such as Migratory Bird Festival campaigns
each October.
NMBCA support will greatly enhance the
conservation of migrants across the Tropical Andes of Ecuador and
Peru. Peruvian Coordinator Wily Palomino, a field biologist who
has spent the last three years as the botanical counterpart of
ornithological expeditions conducting biodiversity inventories and
ornithological research across the Yungas, Punas and Polylepis
forest of Peru. Wily
has been directly involved with the habitat characterization in the
Alto Mayo Protection Forest in Northern Peru, in projects funded by
GTZ. Wily has received scientific and conservation training in
Germany and Costa Rica. He is presently the manager of ECOAN’s
northern Peru office.
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http://www.abcbirds.org/
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Project field team
The project field team is composed entirely of local people who have
received some training or working within our protected areas. With
NMBCA support, they will become competent bird observers for
monitoring and guiding tours. The team will meet biannually to
discuss progress and review monitoring and management plans. During
these meetings, we will provide further instruction courses to build
their capacity. Site coordinators are:
1-Ranger Fernando Estrada, Canande Reserve, Esmeralda Province,
Ecuador 2-Ranger Luis Hipo, Yanacocha Reserve, Pichincha Province,
Ecuador 3-Ranger Darwin Cabrera, Buenaventura Reserve, El Oro
Province, Ecuador 4-Ranger Leonidas Cabrera, Jorupe Reserve, Loja
Province, Ecuador 5-Ranger Franco Mendoza, Tapichalaca Reserve,
Loja Province, Ecuador 6-Forester Pedro Alvarez, Monitoring and
Community Outreach for the Southern Ecuadorian Reserves 7-Ranger
from Alto Mayo Protected Forest, San Martin, Peru 8-Rangers
Roberto Bazan C. / Uver Ojeda L., Abra
Patricia Reserve, Amazonas, Perú
9-Ranger Uver Ogeda Lizana, Abra Patricia Reserve, Amazonas, Perú
10-Ranger Santos Chasquibol, Pomacochas Reserve, Amazonas, Perú
11-Fernando Angulo, Ornithologist (part-time), based in Chiclayo,
Lambayeque, Peru 12-Ranger Edwin R. Sanchez, Sanctuary of Bosque
Pomac, Chiclayo, Lambayeque, Peru 13-Ranger Oscar W. Rodriguez ,
Laquipampa Reserve, Chiclayo, Lambayeque, Perú 14-Alejandro
Tello Guevara, Lake of Junin Reserve, Junin, Perú 15-Gregorio
Ferro Meza, Lake of Huacarpay-Ramsar Site, Cusco, Perú.

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