Status of the volcanically threatened Montserrat OrioleIcterus oberiand other forest birds in Montserrat, West Indies
- 1 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Bird Conservation International
- Vol. 9 (4) , 351-372
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s095927090000352x
Abstract
The Montserrat Oriole Icterus oberi is endemic to the Caribbean island of Montserrat where, prior to 1995, it was widely distributed across the island's three main interior mountain ranges: the Centre, Soufriere and South Soufriere Hills. In July 1995, a long-dormant volcano on Chances Peak in the Soufriere Hills began to erupt. Since then the forest habitat of the oriole on the Soufriere and South Soufriere Hills has been devastated by pyroclastic flows and surges, heavy ash eruptions and rock falls. The Montserrat Oriole populations that inhabited these two mountain ranges have probably been lost. In December 1997, a census of the remaining Centre Hills population was undertaken to assess its status in the face of the heavy ash fall that occurred earlier the same year. To do this, a systematic grid of 140 sample points was overlaid on an area of 1,437.5 n a encompassing the Centre Hills, and a 10-minute count of all bird species was undertaken at 137 of these points during an eight-day survey period. The distance from the point to each oriole detected was measured and records of all other species were allocated to one of five distance bands radiating out from the point. Distance sampling was used to model densities, and thus to estimate population sizes, of eight bird species in the study area. It was estimated that 4,000 (95% CIs 1,500–7,800) Montserrat Orioles remain in the Centre Hills and thus the world. Although the probability of pyroclastic flows and surges overrunning the Centre Hills is considered rerrtote, it is recommended that the Montserrat Oriole be classified as Globally Threatened (Endangered) under the revised IUCN threat categories because of its loss of breeding habitat since 1995.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effects of hurricanes on birds, with special reference to Caribbean islandsBird Conservation International, 1993
- Mapping the volcanic hazards from Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat, West Indies using an image processorJournal of the Geological Society, 1988
- On the Variable Circular Plot Method of Estimating Animal DensityBiometrics, 1987
- A Fixed-radius Point Count Method for Nonbreeding and Breeding Season UseThe Auk, 1986
- Birds of Restocked Conifer Plantations in WalesJournal of Applied Ecology, 1985
- Northern Orioles Disappear with Mt. St. Helens AshfallThe Murrelet, 1981
- A check-list of West Indian amphibians and reptilesPublished by Biodiversity Heritage Library ,1975
- Turnover and Ecological Release in the Avifauna of Mona Island, Puerto RicoThe Auk, 1973
- Population Densities of Birds Derived from Transect CountsThe Auk, 1971