Will this species follow it's large relative, the dodo ? :
Extinction warning: racing to save the little dodo from its cousin's fate
Extinction warning: racing to save the little dodo from its cousin's fate
I think that might be an older article which has been recycled (I've read it before at the least). "Less than 200" is probably an over-estimate. A rough figure I've heard more recently is "in the dozens". What is especially sad is that the species used to be relatively common just a few decades ago (estimated in the low thousands), but they were hit hard by some severe cyclones (less forest means more impact for forest birds when cyclones hit). Since I was young I have wanted to go to Samoa and see the tooth-billed pigeon and now when I finally am going (next month) I am almost certainly too late to have any chance at all![]()
"Surveys suggest that less than 200 birds remain, but the actual population size maybe much lower than this," biologist Rebecca Stirnemann told mongabay.com in a recent interview. "Over 2.5 years of field work in Samoan forests, I have only sighted ten Manumea in the wild. All sightings were of a single adult bird."
Thanks for posting this vogelcommando. I had no idea that this species existed - it seems like a very cool species. Hopefully they can turn its downward trajectory around.