Introduction
The Honduran Emerald Amazilia luciae is endemic to lowland dry forests in Honduras and is considered ‘Critically Endangered’ because of its restricted range and human pressures on its dry forest habitat (BirdLife International 2000), yet little is known of its actual distribution, ecology or habitat requirements. The species was originally described in 1867 by George Lawrence from a single specimen lacking any locality or habitat data other than ‘Honduras’ (Lawrence Reference Lawrence1867). Ten more specimens were collected from 1933 to 1950 at six localities in four Honduran departments of the Caribbean slope: Yoro and Olancho in north-central and eastern Honduras, and Cortés and Santa Bárbara in the west (Figure 1; Monroe Reference Monroe1968). The scant data on the original specimen labels constituted all that was known of the species. Despite extensive fieldwork in Honduras, Monroe never observed the species (Monroe Reference Monroe1968), and nothing else was known of its distribution or habitat usage until it was rediscovered in Yoro in 1988 (Howell and Webb Reference Howell and Webb1989) and in Olancho in 1996 (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Bonta and Thorn1998). These brief reports focused mainly on the rediscovery of the species and provided only general characteristics of the habitat and the use of some nectar resources. A more complete knowledge of the Honduran Emerald’s geographic distribution and ecological requirements, as well as human impacts on its habitat, are lacking and are required to develop plans to protect and manage the species.
The principal objective of our work is to provide a more thorough description of the distribution, habitats and ecology of the species. This information is based on two foundations: (1) our rediscovery of the species in western Honduras, where it was last observed in 1935, a finding that alters the historic perception of the habitat usage by the species, as well as its known distribution; (2) our combined experience of over 20 years working with dry forests in Honduras and with the Honduran Emerald. We further reflect on the conservation status of the species, and offer suggestions for future studies to benefit its conservation.
Methods
Study area
We conducted surveys for the Honduran Emerald within and around arid, intermontane valleys in the Honduran departments of Yoro, Olancho, Santa Bárbara, and Cortés during February 2007 and November 2008. Our surveys were focused at two levels: (1) valleys where the species was known to occur or had been historically reported (Monroe Reference Monroe1968); and (2) nearby valleys with similar climate and habitats where we predicted the species was likely to occur. We therefore focused our searches on these valleys: Agalta, Gualaco, and Telica valleys in Olancho Department; Aguán Valley in Yoro Department; the Tencoa Valley in Santa Bárbara Department; and Quimistán Valley in Santa Bárbara and Cortés Departments (Figure 1).
Habitat searches
We began by using low-level overflights to conduct aerial searches for potentially suitable habitat that would be accessible for subsequent ground searches for hummingbirds. We used overflights to facilitate habitat searches because Honduras has a rugged, mountainous topography, much of which is roadless. Further, within the landscape potentially inhabited by the Honduran Emerald, much of the remaining forest cover is on large, privately owned cattle ranches with restricted access. We conducted overflights in a Cessna 206 fixed-wing aircraft and used global positioning system units (GPS) to mark the centres of forest remnants we observed from the air. On 15 and 16 February 2007 we conducted six hours of overflights along a trajectory that covered approximately 560 km.
Bird surveys
Subsequent to overflights, we visited forest remnants viewed from the air and conducted ground searches for the Honduran Emerald. While searching we walked through potential habitat surveying for hummingbirds from 06h00 to 14h00, during which we used visual and auditory cues to detect and identify hummingbirds. Searching was focused in particular around flowering plants that might be nectar resources for hummingbirds.
We conducted ground searches for Honduran Emerald across a range of elevations (160–750 m) and habitats, including: mixed pine-oak forests, gallery forests along streams, mature dry forests (“thorn forests”), open-canopied Acacia spp. scrub, mature moist forests, and forests with different aspects or topography adjacent to forests in which we found the Honduran Emerald. We did so because we suspected that habitat use by the species was incompletely known, and we wanted to increase our chances of finding the species by searching for it in varying forest types. We also reasoned that unsuccessful searches in a variety of habitats within the species’ range would be informative on its habitat preferences.
Ecological observations
Each time we encountered a Honduran Emerald individual we observed the bird for as long as it was in view and noted the species of flowers upon which it foraged. We also recorded broad scale habitat characteristics including dominant overstorey and understorey vegetation, canopy height, and canopy closure.
Additional observations
The authors have a combined experience in excess of 20 years of working with the Honduran Emerald and dry forests in Honduras. Additional anecdotal observations on behaviour and habitat characteristics are derived from this experience.
Results
Distribution
We collected 19 visual observations of the Honduran Emerald in three Honduran departments (Table 1). We rediscovered the Honduran Emerald in western Honduras in two separate valleys in Santa Bárbara Department: the Quimistán Valley (Río Chamelecón watershed) and Tencoa Valley (Río Ulúa watershed; Figure 1). In the Tencoa Valley we found individuals in five fragments separated from each other by at least 5 km, and which measured from five to 60 ha in size. Based on plumage differences and timing and direction of movements we were able to identify a minimum of 10 individuals in the Tencoa Valley. We found a single individual in adult male plumage in the Quimistán Valley in a forest remnant that measured approximately 40 ha. The six forest remnants where we observed Honduran Emerald in Santa Bárbara occurred at elevations from 250 to 345 m. Our observations in Santa Bárbara spanned a 33-km north-south longitudinal transect. These observations represent the first report of Honduran Emerald in western Honduras since 1935. We discovered a population in the Telica Valley, Olancho Department, where the species had not previously been reported. Finally, we also observed the Honduran Emerald in the Agalta Valley (Olancho Department) and the Aguán Valley (Yoro Department) where it was previously known to occur.
Habitat
All our records were from forest fragments ranging in size from five to 100 ha, and at elevations of 250–500 m. Habitats occupied by the Honduran Emerald differed in forest structure and floristic composition between eastern and western Honduras. The habitat in eastern Honduras is an open-canopied xeric woodland or thorn forest characterized by a high incidence of deciduous or semi-deciduous trees and arborescent cacti in the overstorey (Pilosocereus leucuocephalus, Acacia deami, Chloroleucon mangense, Haematoxylon brasiletto, Pithecelobium lanceolatum, Malpighia glabra, Eugenia coyolensis, Achatocarpus nigricans, Coccoloba acapulcensis, Guaiacum sanctum). Average height of the canopy is 5 m with emergents reaching to 15 m. Similar to the overstorey, thorny species are a dominant characteristic of the understorey, represented by Cactaceae (2 species), Fabaceae (1 species), and Euphorbiaceae (1 species). Epiphytes are abundant on overstorey trees and consist mainly of bromeliads such as Aechmea bracteata, Tillandsia fasciculata, and the orchids Myrmecophila wendlandii, Laelia rubescens, and Encyclia nematocaulon. Ground cover is sparse. These forests occur almost exclusively on flat slopes of the valley floor at elevations of 200 to 500 m.
Sites occupied by the Honduran Emerald in western Honduras are best described as semi-deciduous woodland, a habitat not previously associated with the species. Canopy height averages 15 m, with a predominance of semi-deciduous broad-leaved tree species, principally Eugenia oerstediana, Bursera simaruba, and Tabebuia rosea, that form a relatively closed canopy. Common understorey species are Agave parvidentata, Tillandsia fasciculata, Bromelia pinguin, Bromelia plumieri, and Acanthocereus pentagonus. This forest type, rather than occurring on the valley floor, is distributed around the circumference of arid valleys above the valley floor and below the level of lower montane pine-oak forests. Despite searching for the Honduran Emerald in thorn forests on valley floors in western Honduras, we failed to detect it in this habitat type.
Food plants
We observed Honduran Emerald feeding on 14 species of plants, including cacti (Cactaceae: Melocactus curvispinus, Nopalea hondurensis, Pilosocereus leucuocephalus, Stenocereus yunckeri), thorny shrubs or low trees (Fabaceae: Caesalpinia yucatanensis, Leucaena lempirana), vines (Combretaceae: Combretum fruticosum), herbs (Acanthaceae: Aphelandra scabra, Euphorbiaceae: Pedilanthus camporum, Sterculiaceae: Helicteres gauzaumifolia), epiphytes (Bromeliaceae: Aechmea bracteata, Tillandsia fasciculata, Bromelia plumieri) and parasites (Loranthaceae: Psittacanthus rhyncanthus). Use of individual species has not been quantified. However, during field observations in Yoro > 90% of visitation was to Pedilanthus camporum, which flowers year-round, and Nopalea hondurensis, which flowers principally from February to April. During our brief observations in western Honduras, > 90% of foraging observations were on Aphelandra scabra and Helicteres guazaumifolia.
Discussion
Based on our observations in western Honduras, the Honduran Emerald is more widespread than recently believed. The population in Santa Bárbara department is 200 km west of the nearest known population in the Aguán Valley. Of greater importance is the discovery that the species is not restricted to thorn forests, and that it inhabits semi-deciduous woodland in the west, a finding that increases the extent of available habitat. Previously, the species was believed to be restricted to arid thorn forests (Schuchmann Reference Schuchmann, del Hoyo, Elliot and Sargatal1999, BirdLife International 2000), a habitat that has mostly disappeared in western Honduras. Indeed, this belief may have hindered the rediscovery of the species in western Honduras, as searches there were directed at thorn forests (Howell and Webb Reference Howell and Webb1989, Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Bonta and Thorn1998), while suitable habitats went overlooked.
Habitat origins and threats
Conservation of Honduran Emerald habitats will depend on an accurate appreciation of the current threats to these habitats, which must in turn be interpreted over both geologic and historical scales. Destruction of dry forests in Honduras for ranching and agriculture has been considered the main threat to the continued existence of the species (Schuchmann Reference Schuchmann, del Hoyo, Elliot and Sargatal1999, BirdLife International 2000, Thorn et al. Reference Thorn, House and Perez2000). Based partly on our observations in a broader habitat type, we argue that this conclusion must be reinterpreted with respect to the origins of, and human impacts on, dry forests in Honduras. Dry forests on the Caribbean slope of Honduras represent a fragmented, relictual distribution of a once more widely distributed habitat type that originated with Pleistocene aridity 14,000 to 10,000 BP (Duellman Reference Duellman1966, Savage Reference Savage1966, Leyden Reference Leyden1984, Bush and Colinvaux Reference Bush and Colinvaux1990, Bush et al. Reference Bush, Piperno, Colinvaux, De Oliveira, Krissek, Miller and Rowe1992). The distribution of dry forests has likely experienced several expansions and contractions due to pre-Columbian and post-colonial human activities, including widespread use of fire by native peoples (Stone Reference Stone1957, Johannessen Reference Johannessen1963), followed by the decimation of native peoples during the colonial era, and subsequent variability in stocking rates of livestock over the past 500 years (Johannessen Reference Johannessen1963). We argue, therefore, that dry forests in Honduras appear resilient to human intervention. Cattle ranching per se is not responsible for the destruction of thorn forest, as primitive ranching methods that rely on machetes and manual labour to cut and remove shrubs and trees from pastures and savannas do little to control the spread of woody plants (Johannessen Reference Johannessen1963, Bonta Reference Bonta2003). In contrast, the modernisation of agriculture, wherein tractor-pulled ploughs and bulldozers are used to convert thorn forest to pastures or crops such as cotton, watermelon, and plantains, results in irreversible loss of thorn forest (Bonta Reference Bonta2003).
Conservation
The Honduran Emerald is considered ‘Critically Endangered’ (BirdLife International 2000) on the basis that it occurs in fragmented habitats of limited distribution that are under continuous pressure from human activities, namely clearing for agriculture and cattle grazing, road construction, and wood extraction (Thorn et al. Reference Thorn, House and Perez2000, Bonta Reference Bonta2003). We propose that the conservation of the species will depend on four factors: conservation of its habitat; studies on its distribution within suitable habitats, estimates of population density and total population size; and genetic analyses to determine if the populations that appear geographically isolated are connected genetically through dispersal.
The Aguán Valley is currently considered to contain the largest extent of thorn forest in Honduras, recently estimated at 8,495 ha (Thorn et al. Reference Thorn, House and Perez2000). Of this total, the four largest fragments measured between 360 and 476 ha, for a combined total of 1,704 ha. The rate at which thorn forest was cleared from 1994 to 2000 averaged 379 ha per year (Thorn et al. Reference Thorn, House and Perez2000). In comparison, coverage of thorn forest in Olancho is more restricted. We know of only a single forest remnant larger than 100 ha, and based on aerial imagery, our overflights, and ground searches, we conservatively estimate that fewer than 2,000 ha of habitat remains in Olancho.
In 2005 the Honduran government created a reserve for the explicit purpose of protecting the species and its habitat (Lobo Sosa Reference Lobo Sosa2005). Located 34 km west of the city Olanchito, the official name of the reserve is ‘Área de Manejo Hábitat y Especie Colibrí Esmeralda Hondureño’. The reserve measures 1,217 ha and encompasses elevations from 220 to 800 m. There are 651 ha of dry forest habitat suitable for the Honduran Emerald, all at lower elevations (Thorn et al. Reference Thorn, House and Perez2000).
Distribution, population density and population size
The actual distribution of the Honduran Emerald is still incompletely known. Within dry forests, the species has only ever been reported from interior valleys on the Caribbean Slope (Monroe Reference Monroe1968). We recommend that searches be conducted in the following Caribbean slope valleys: the Olancho (= Guayape), Guaimaca, and Lepaguare valleys in Olancho Department; the Locomapa and Yoro valleys in Yoro Department; the Otoro Valley in Intibucá Department; and the Talanga Valley in Francisco Morazán Department (Figure 1). Finally, the Honduran Emerald may even occur in semi-deciduous woodlands in nearby Guatemala. No estimates of population density exist for any sites where the Honduran Emerald is known, and there are no estimates, even grossly approximate ones, for the overall population size of the species. Monitoring of future population trends throughout Honduras will depend on baseline estimates of population densities and sizes at the current time.
Dispersal
At least 18 species in the genus Amazilia engage in seasonal and elevational movements or post-breeding dispersal (Schuchmann Reference Schuchmann, del Hoyo, Elliot and Sargatal1999). These movements presumably arise in response to seasonal availability of nectar resources in arid habitats, such as that inhabited by the Honduran Emerald. It is not known if or how far individuals of Honduran Emerald disperse, what habitats are important for dispersal, or which of the populations are linked genetically through dispersal. Such data are needed if it is eventually determined that populations in discrete arid valleys are linked through dispersal.
Our rediscovery of the Honduran Emerald in western Honduras increases the known distribution and population size of the species, giving additional hope for its conservation. Nonetheless we recommend that its status as ‘Critically Endangered’ be maintained pending future investigations, because the habitats occupied by the Honduran Emerald are restricted in distribution and continue to be affected by human activities, and because basic components of its life history, including seasonal movements and population densities, are still unknown.
Acknowledgements
This paper resulted from a joint effort of the Honduran Emerald Working Group and The Hummingbird Society. Carla Cárcamo of the Instituto Nacional de Conservación y Desarrollo Forestal (ICF) in Honduras kindly granted research permits. Financial and logistical support for fieldwork came from The Explorers Club, the Centro Zamorano de Biodiversidad, and The Hummingbird Society. This manuscript benefited from reviews by J. V. Remsen, Mark Bonta, Oliver Komar, Lee Jones, Tom Schulenburg, and two anonymous reviewers.