Jorge Velásquez will always remember the day he offered his undergraduate thesis at a nationwide ornithology convention in Colombia. The younger biologist had recognized gaps in parrot conservation and pinpointed particular locations the place new protected areas might have the best influence. “Somebody from the Colombian Ministry of the Atmosphere stated to me, ‘This analysis is nice. However you do know that is by no means going to occur, proper?’ ” Velásquez remembers. It took 20 years, however now that very same type of science is guiding one of the vital bold conservation partnerships within the hemisphere.
The initiative, known as Conserva Aves, is a transformational effort, says Aurelio Ramos, Audubon’s managing director for Latin America and the Caribbean. Main chicken conservation teams—Audubon, BirdLife Worldwide, the American Fowl Conservancy, and Birds Canada—have teamed up with the Latin American and Caribbean Community of Environmental Funds, the area’s largest environmental financing consortium. They’re addressing substantial conservation gaps by supporting native organizations and Indigenous teams in creating protected websites that profit migratory and resident birds.
Governments often deal with creating giant nationwide parks that may take years to arrange, forsaking the pressing wants of birds in decline, says Velásquez, Audubon’s science director for Latin America and the Caribbean: “We don’t have that type of time.”
Conserva Aves takes a extra fluid method. It channels grants, usually about $125,000, to native communities and organizations for initiatives that shield birds and create sustainable livelihoods. It unites the fundraising capability and on-the-ground expertise of BirdLife companions with Audubon’s science to establish conservation “sizzlingspots,” locations that host wealthy wildlife and are utilized by folks, says Ian Davidson, BirdLife International’s regional director for the Americas.
Since 2021, Conserva Aves has helped create, broaden, or assist greater than 180 protected areas managed by 200 companions in 9 nations. Greater than 1,840 chicken species profit from habitat safety by way of Conserva Aves, together with 82 species which might be critically endangered, endangered, or weak. And 51,000 folks profit from coaching packages, sustainable livelihoods, and strengthened native governance. Seeing the work unfold “has been one of the vital fulfilling experiences of my skilled life,” Velásquez says. The initiative stretches effectively past his desk. Conserva Aves is constructing a conservation legacy designed to reverberate for many years. From Mexico to Chile, it’s already boosting the prospects for a whole lot of chicken species whereas uplifting the individuals who dwell alongside them.
Linking Protections: Colombia
For the previous twenty years, Afro-descendant communities in northwestern Colombia have managed their collective lands by placing conservation on the forefront. In 2025 Conserva Aves helped them undertake one final important step towards defending their ecologically wealthy panorama and supporting their native economic system.
The trouble dates again to the formation in 2002 of the Group Council of Black Communities of the Tolo River Basin and Southern Coastal Zone (COCOMASUR), which manages practically 100,000 acres of collectively owned land. “We’ve all the time, even our eldest, been about conservation,” says Ferney Caicedo Panesso, COCOMASUR’s technical coordinator of biodiversity monitoring. After a failed foray into logging a small tract, they went all in on sustaining their appreciable pure assets.
By 2010 they’d established the world’s first community-owned territory to situation carbon market certificates. Corporations offset their emissions by paying COCOMASUR to preserve the hall, and the group used the funds for brand spanking new conservation efforts, Caicedo Panesso says. Subsequent they fashioned a protected stretch of forests, mountains, and marshes important for birds. And in 2013, they partnered with the nationwide park service and neighboring communities to create a nesting sanctuary for weak sea turtles.
Regardless of these efforts, a swath of unprotected habitat remained amongst these three areas. Conserva Aves helped them bridge the hole, says Marcela Ibarra Becerra, a forest monitor and COCOMASUR’s Conserva Aves venture coordinator. The initiative coated the authorized bills concerned in safeguarding 10,500 acres that join the prevailing protected areas, guaranteeing that wildlife can proceed to roam throughout ecosystems. Eight forest guardians frequently stroll or experience horses by way of the realm, using GPS models, optics, and cameras to notice habitat adjustments and report the species they encounter. The funds additionally helped broaden monitoring efforts to trace key chicken species.
Some vacationers had all the time visited, however with the Conserva Aves grant, locals created new financial alternatives. They mapped birding routes, educated guides, and purchased birding instruments reminiscent of binoculars and discipline guides. “Communities that didn’t see themselves as having the ability to present community-based tourism companies at the moment are seeing that they will,” Ibarra Becerra says. “The venture presents growth alternate options with out altering who we’re.”
Rising Dedication: Mexico
The Isthmus of Tehuantepec, the narrowest land connection between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in Mexico, is an distinctive place. Its various landscapes vary from swampy, tropical jungles on the northern Gulf coast to temperate mountains, which give strategy to dry, tropical savanna on the Pacific slopes. A wide selection of endemic species, together with 11 sorts of birds, occupy the wealthy mixture of habitats, says Jorge Montejo, a biologist with SOS Social Solutions, a nonprofit that promotes environmental schooling and behavioral change on the native stage.
Scientists have carried out only some research of this ecological treasure trove, Montejo says, and plenty of locals are largely unaware of the biodiversity of their yard. Zuleyma Enríquez Casique has all the time loosely famous the abundance of birds round her on the southern portion of the isthmus on the collectively owned and cooperatively farmed lands referred to as the Mazahua Ejido. “I typically checked out them, admiring their colours, however that’s about it,” she says. A Conserva Aves–funded venture, led by SOS Social Options, goals to alter that.
The group is working with native residents to ascertain conservation areas on practically 25,000 acres within the Mazahua, Almoloya-Rincón Vaquero, and Mena Nizanda ejidos. The areas span the big variety of habitats and are house to a various vary of communities, together with Afro-Mexican farmers and Indigenous Zapoteco and Zoque peoples. Every group guided the collection of protected areas in response to their cultural and organic values. The proposed boundaries of 1, as an example, embody locations the place group healers collect most of their vegetation, says Marissa Anzueto, common director of SOS Social Options.
In others, the presence of birds will assist draw the strains. Enríquez Casique and Mario Torres Ordaz, who can also be from Mazahua Ejido, are two of the 9 folks coaching to survey and monitor native birds and their habitats. To start, they’re specializing in 5 weak species—Yellow-headed Amazons, Inexperienced Parakeets, Cinnamon-tailed Sparrows, and Rose-bellied and Orange-breasted Buntings—in three proposed protected areas. Final 12 months, Enríquez Casique and Torres Ordaz used binoculars for the primary time. With a brand new GPS unit, the budding birdwatchers mapped the routes they’ll traverse at the very least as soon as per week by way of the top of 2026 to search for goal species.
“The primary time I heard about birdwatching, I assumed, ‘They’re loopy,’ ” Torres Ordaz says. “We didn’t comprehend it was such an enormous factor, globally. Now that we do and we all know what now we have, we’re able to preserve the birds and maintain them.”
Accelerating Autonomy: Bolivia
Alfredo Matareco Maza discovered combat hearth alongside his father in San José del Cavitu, their village within the Bolivian Amazon rainforest. Each dry season, they adopted the group’s long-standing guidelines for lighting managed burns meant to stop harmful wildfires, reminiscent of all the time ready till after rainfall to burn small plots of cropland and utilizing hearth strains to comprise the flames. These conventional strategies proved efficient till 2023, when an excessive drought led to unprecedented wildfires within the Southwest Amazonian rainforest. It was a wake-up name, Matareco Maza says: They wanted new allies and methods.
Fortunately, Matareco Maza was in a very good place to do one thing about that. In 2023 he had grow to be the primary chief, or Cacique, of a brand new Multi-ethnic Indigenous Territory (TIM) that features 28 communities. Below this distinctive type of authorities, Indigenous communities have unprecedented autonomy and entry to funding to guard their lands from outdoors threats reminiscent of unlawful logging, searching, mining, and land occupation, says Catalina Rivadeneira Canedo, coordinator for the Amazon Area at Oré, a nonprofit devoted to Indigenous self-determination and conservation.
From the beginning, Matareco Maza says, one of many TIM’s priorities was to safeguard Loma Santa, a biodiverse area with wetlands, floodplains, and forests. The realm is house to a number of Indigenous teams, together with the T’simane folks, whose lifestyle is carefully tied to the forest, and it borders one among Bolivia’s largest nationwide protected areas, TIPNIS. It is usually more and more in danger from wildfire. In 2024, beneath a federal legislation promoted by the TIM authorities, Loma Santa grew to become the primary Indigenous protected space within the Bolivian Amazon. The subsequent step for communities was figuring out handle these 500,000 acres inside the TIM.
Via Oré, Conserva Aves offered funding and assist to make the purpose a actuality in brief order.
The Oré group labored with Indigenous leaders, native authorities, and T’siname folks to create biodiversity inventories of chicken and fish species and develop a administration plan. Final August the TIM publicly offered methods for sustaining the conservation space, which helps practically 280 chicken species and permits fishing and attempting to find private use. “Though we already had the concept, Conserva Aves gave us the push we wanted,” Matareco Maza says.
To make sure that the conservation space is effectively managed, 60 Indigenous folks with deep native data of the panorama educated as forest rangers, says Oré biologist Miguel Ángel Fernández. The rangers monitor the well being of rivers, forests, and wildlife all through the TIM.
To assist safeguard the newly established conservation space in opposition to wildfire, 16 of the rangers have obtained firefighting gear and coaching by way of Conserva Aves. They mix conventional strategies, new instruments, and trendy applied sciences like climate stations, which has helped them extra successfully forestall giant wildfires, Matareco Maza says. Given the uncertainties local weather change presents, having these assets is extra essential than ever. “We will now prioritize so many wants in response to our actuality,” Matareco Maza says.
Making Inroads: Peru
Residents of Calabaza, a tiny Indigenous Quechua Huanca village in Peru’s Satipo cloud forest, haven’t traditionally seen numerous vacationers. In current a long time, hardcore birders sometimes confirmed up searching for elusive species just like the Oxapampa Antpitta and the Junin Tapaculo, however these guests had been all the time guided by outdoors businesses that hardly engaged with the group, says Gerson Ferrer, communications director for Yunkawasi, a Peruvian conservation group and Conserva Aves companion.
When the native soccer group gained the 2012 regional soccer championship, they used their winnings to construct lodging for birders.
The group was excited by drawing extra avitourists who would contribute to the native economic system. When the native soccer group gained the 2012 regional soccer championship, they used their winnings to construct lodging for birders. However they didn’t know transfer ahead with recruiting the guests.
In early 2024, Yunkawasi and authorities representatives arrived to offer a possible answer: making a protected space that will draw ecotourism. Initially, they had been met with mistrust. A highway has crossed this area since colonial occasions, but a long time of armed battle remoted Indigenous villages all through the Nineteen Eighties and Nineteen Nineties. What’s extra, the few conservation initiatives undertaken by outsiders had conflicted with ranching and agriculture in some locations, which threatened residents’ livelihoods. “We weren’t excited by coordinating with exterior conservation initiatives,” says Amador Macario Alanya, president of the community-based tourism affiliation Calabaza Corazón.
At first, residents shunned the conferences Yunkawasi held. It was solely after the biologists celebrated with them on the city’s anniversary social gathering that locals engaged. Slowly, says Yunkawasi director Fanny Cornejo, they gained the belief of individuals in Calabaza and 9 different Indigenous communities in and across the proposed 130,000-acre protected space.
Yunkawasi and the regional authorities labored with communities to find out permitted actions inside the protected space, which is within the last phases of official recognition. The conservationists are supporting Ashaninka farmers who’re changing open espresso plots into shade-grown ones that harbor a bevy of birds. They’re collaborating with Quechua Huanca farmers to keep up native potato varieties utilizing a mixture of historic and trendy methods. They’ve additionally teamed up with a dairy cooperative to enhance merchandise and diversify with a brand new line of yogurt and ice cream made with native fruits.
In Calabaza, residents are realizing the long-held avitourism dream. Group leaders and biologists mapped birding routes and strengthened native capability for receiving guests. Final 12 months, for the primary time ever, Calabaza took half within the World Large Day, when folks worldwide tally all of the birds they see. On Might 10, 2025, 35 guests walked the three new trails, recognizing 80-plus species, together with the Peruvian Wren and Yellow-scarfed Tanager. “It was actually thrilling as a result of we’d by no means seen something prefer it,” Alanya says. The occasion was a small victory: an essential step towards constructing a future that they now dare to dream they’ll obtain.
Sounding Survival: Colombia
Each morning when Fernanda Emilé Barrios Benavides wakes up on El Ensueño (the Daydream), the small farm the place she lives along with her husband, she listens to the forest round her. When the couple first arrived on the mountains of Calima El Darién in southern Colombia in 2016, she didn’t suppose a lot in regards to the avian soundscape. After she grew to become a chicken monitor for Conserva Aves final 12 months, nevertheless, what as soon as appeared like a blanket of sound revealed itself as a wealthy tapestry of songs.
In 2024, with funding from Conserva Aves, native companion Fundación Trópico and regional environmental authorities protected 45,000 acres of forest and farmland. The partnership labored with small farmers and bigger business operations to remodel straight agricultural land into bird-friendly agroforestry programs that draw ecotourists. It additionally grew to become one of many pilot websites for Conserva Aves’ acoustic monitoring program assisted by synthetic intelligence (AI).
Final October, a $2 million award from the Bezos Earth Fund allowed the partnership to deploy AI-assisted technology that identifies birds by their songs. At three pilot websites in Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia, members arrange recording gadgets that constantly seize the soundscape; the software program analyzes the recordings and divulges which birds are current. Barrios Benavides is one among seven farmers engaged on the venture in Colombia, gaining a fuller image of the birdlife their land helps. She and her husband discovered that their 15-acre farm is house to 2 weak species: Purple-ruffed Fruitcrows and Munchique Wooden-Wrens. “We really feel an enormous duty towards them,” she says.
When Fundación Trópico first arrived in Calima El Darién greater than 30 years in the past, Colombia’s armed battle was ravaging rural cities, and vacationers averted the area. The group left amid the violence. When the group returned in 2015 after a decade-long absence, they seen that mining pursuits had moved in and labored with locals to guard growth in key forests. Alongside espresso farms and cattle ranches, remaining forested areas harbor practically 600 chicken species, together with migratory Canada Warblers endemic to Cauca Guans.
Now Fundación Trópico is working to construct up new revenue streams whereas additionally safeguarding biodiversity. “The potential is big, however the threat can also be huge,” says Ana Elvia Arana, the group’s technical space coordinator.
On one hand, they’re supporting new enterprise ventures, offering all the things from technical help and satellite tv for pc web to chicken guides and different primary gear. Take new visitor lodges, for instance: “We’ve been bringing them blankets, pillows, dishes, glasses, pots—issues they realized they wanted when vacationers began arriving,” Arana says. On the identical time, to keep away from an overabundance of holiday makers which may disturb birds or degrade habitat, the group is assessing the circulation of holiday makers to the area to assist form a nature-based tourism program. “It’s a very gradual course of,” Arana says. However individuals are extraordinarily motivated: “Conferences there are all the time a celebration.” An upbeat environment appears solely pure, given how a lot the group has to rejoice.
This story initially ran within the Spring 2026 situation as “Widespread Curiosity.” To obtain our print journal, grow to be a member by making a donation today.
