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SAVING THE BLACK-BREASTED PUFFLEG

Found nowhere outside Ecuador, the black-breasted puffleg is a small to average-sized hummingbird with distinctive white leg plumage. This little bird prefers high altitudes, spending the rainy season above 10,000 feet and the rest of the year — when certain preferred plants flower — residing between 9,006 and 10,000 feet.

The black-breasted puffleg historically inhabited the northern ridge-crests of Volcán Pichincha and Volcán Atacazo, volcanoes in the Andes . But tellingly, it hasn’t been confirmed on Volcán Atacazo since 1902, and it’s expected to be extirpated from that location. Now the bird is restricted to Volcán Pichincha, an active volcano — and its population is made up of no more than 250 individuals, whose suitable habitat is ever disappearing.

KEY DOCUMENTS
2008 federal Endangered Species Act listing proposal
2008 federal notice that species warrants listing
1994 federal 12-month finding on 1991 listing petition

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RELATED ISSUES
International Program
International Birds Initiative

Contact: Jacki Lopez

Photo © Benji Schwartz