Carl, one would certainly hope so!
Another question: how effective would Spix's macaw be to find mates long distance?
Another question: how effective would Spix's macaw be to find mates long distance?
BREAKING NEWS ! The release date of the first 8 Spix's macaw is made public. The birds will be released on June 14 into their former home-range !
The first eight Spix's macaws have now been released into the wild, with another twelve due to follow later in the year.
More information can be found in the link below:
Spix's Macaw returns to wild - BirdGuides
The question is, are there monitoring systems in place to keep an eye on the birds? Given the locale vicinity has been made public as well as photos of the conditioning aviaries, it wouldn't be too hard for people to start picking off birds. If macaws start getting picked off illegally the last thing that needs to happen is further releases.
Well now would probably be the hardest time to sell a Spix under the radar, I wonder if the macaws are chipped ?
Hard to sell once they reach a point they have a chance of getting inspected and spotted, but how many might die before they reach that point? Smuggled birds have a notoriously low survival rate after getting mistreatment of all sorts. What market remains that might be tempting enough to attempt snagging the macaws? Even very eagle-eyed countries still suffer from it - from time to time there's stories of Ecuador busting people with tortoises or iguanas coming off the Galapagos, and the recent scandal of ACTP and Australia. Hopefully the Spix is high profile enough they will not be an attractive target again for smuggling, but it is hard to say...
I was told Spix’s are worth 250 000€ for a couple, not sure on what market if there is any but indeed that’s more than enough for people to be interested in smuggling them. However I assume the program took this parameter in consideration and are monitoring the birds well enough to reduce this eventuality?
The ACTP scandal had no smuggle involved as far as I know, it was just dubious paperwork and obvious corruption but most bird imported if not all were captive bred
The ACTP scandal had no smuggle involved as far as I know, it was just dubious paperwork and obvious corruption but most bird imported if not all were captive bred
Most of ACPT's birds came from the Al Wabra breeding centre when it closed. All(?) were captive bred. Al Wabra's founder stock in turn mostly originated from a breeder/bird dealer called Dios(?) in the Phillipines. How many of his birds were wild caught I don't know but he was the first person to significantly increase the number in captivity by successful breeding. Al Wabra and then later ACPT both built on that foundation. I believe the last wildcaught individual entered captivity around 1978 and was possibly the previous partner of the last wild male.
The ACTP scandal was not about the Spix. Some of the macaws came indeed from Dios, owner of Birds International Incorporated, a company based in the Philippines. He is also the first very succesful Fig parrot breeder, and I believe most if not all the Fig parrots we have in Europe came from him.
As far as I know, ACTP imported many birds from Australia, I can't remember if it was 120 or 200, and it was for conservation purposes. However, many of the birds were actually captive bred mutations, which were then sold to privates in Europe.
Every now and then you can find a Zanda latirostris for sale, one might wonder where the parents came from as well...
Yes, I think I got confused here. Sorry for the mix-up. I remember the ACPT scandal now, weren't some rare Australian black cockatoos that they managed to import involved too?
And now the project and another good historical overview Till the present.
Please note the plan is to release larger groups of Spix's macaws and also with Illiger's macaws that know the habitat. This is in the expectancy that the macaws will work as a group, there is safety in numbers and survive better over time in the wild after release and provide the birds with plenty of opportunities to choose their own partner (remember the Anodorhynchus macaws are choosy on partners.
Source:
Two decades after it vanished, the stunning Spix’s macaw returns to its forest home