Abstract

Psittacidae species are among the most threatened birds in the world. Approximately one-half of the 390 parrot species are experiencing population declines. The Blue-fronted Amazon (Amazona aestiva) is the most traded parrot worldwide and suffers from poaching and habitat loss. Many species of parrots, including the Blue-fronted Amazon, form communal roosts where they spend the night. Under certain circumstances, roost surveys can be a rapid and cost-effective way to obtain information about the demography of parrots or the consequences of threats. We surveyed an area of 2,700 km2 in a large wetland in mid-western of Brazil and located five Blue-fronted Amazon roosts. We conducted monthly counts of the birds arriving at these roosts for 28–61 months and stratified the counts into flock sizes. We used this information to estimate the number of parrots using these roosts to determine whether the roosts follow seasonal patterns and whether they have different flock-size structures and different dynamics throughout the year, as well as to determine the trends of the roosting parrots, which are stratified by flock size. The roosts were different, as they followed different seasonal patterns and had different flock-size structures, which could be interpreted in relation to the parrot breeding cycle. The trends of singletons, which index the number of reproductive couples each year, and the number of pairs parrots increased or fluctuated around a baseline, but the number of fledged young in the year declined throughout the study. This is of concern, as it indicates problems in population recruitment, which could have been unnoticed by the management authorities, as the total numbers were not decreasing. Although every monitored roost had birds of each age or reproductive condition strata, the fact that the roosts were different could be important in terms of management, as it will be more effective for the conservation of the Blue-fronted Amazon to protect a carefully chosen set of complementary roosts.

Highlights

  • The family Psittacidae includes a large proportion of threatened species, and at least one-third of the 390 parrot species worldwide are in some category of risk [1]

  • Many studies have used the counts of roosting parrots to make inferences about their population numbers and reproductive dynamics [25, 27, 45, 46]

  • Some authors [27] observed that one member of an incubating pair of Red-lored Amazons (Amazona autumnalis), presumably the male, usually returned to the communal roost and stated that the numbers of roosting singletons should increase during this period

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Summary

Introduction

The family Psittacidae includes a large proportion of threatened species, and at least one-third of the 390 parrot species worldwide are in some category of risk [1]. Natureza and Fundacão de Ciência e Tecnologia do Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul (Fundect/CNPq grant PRONEX 006/2015). Coordenacão de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nıvel Superior (CAPES) provided a scholarship to GHFS (20052009) and Fundect/CNPq provide a fellowship to GHFS (DCR 278/2014). Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientıfico e Tecnologico (CNPq) awarded a productivity fellowship to GM (308934/ 2017-2). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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