Caribbean-wide festival focuses on region’s unique birds
April 2006
HAMILTON, Bermuda: Conservation organisations throughout the Caribbean on Saturday launched the fifth annual month-long celebration of the region’s unique bird life.
The Caribbean Endemic Bird Festival runs from April 22, "Earth Day," until May 22, "International Biodiversity Day," and is coordinated by the Society for the Conservation and Study of Caribbean Birds (SCSCB).
Activities will range from exhibitions of drawings and paintings by local schoolchildren, public lectures, photographic exhibitions, church services, bird-watching excursions, and theatrical productions in celebration of the region's rich bird life.
In launching the Festival, Andrew Dobson, President of SCSCB, said, "This Festival is a celebration! A celebration of a unique and irreplaceable aspect of Caribbean collective life and culture. In the face of climate change and other ominous environmental threats, both wide-scale education and conservation action is imperative to secure our biodiversity. Thanks to this annual Festival, people will learn to appreciate and value our region's globally significant and highly threatened natural heritage as is clearly illustrated by our bird life.”
More than one in five Caribbean bird species are endemic to the region, that is, they are found nowhere else on the earth. Dobson appealed to the Caribbean public to become more aware of the region’s local plants and animals, and to help conserve them for future generations.
In the first four years of the annual Festival, more than 17,000 persons participated directly, while thousands of others have learned about the bird life and overall biodiversity of the Caribbean through regional media houses, magazines, and the internet.
Dr Lisa Sorenson, Caribbean Ornithologist and Professor in the Department of Biology, Boston University, USA and Vice-president of the Society, said "The Caribbean is blessed with an amazing diversity of birdlife. In addition to the many endemics, the islands also provide a home for many migratory species, which may spend up to nine months of the year here. The residents and migrants all depend on the food, water, and shelter that is provided in our forest, scrub and wetland habitats. It is the responsibility of every Caribbean national to cherish and protect these beautiful birds and their habitats. The festival is a wonderful opportunity to call attention to and celebrate our collective natural heritage."
Members of the international conservation community have called the Festival an unprecedented opportunity for education and the generation of pride in what is uniquely Caribbean biodiversity.
They have also noted that this is an important call for greater responsibility to safeguard the wider Caribbean environment’s valuable natural assets, to prevent wide-scale extinction and support sustainable development.
The month-long annual Festival is highlighting the fact that the Caribbean islands are recognized as one of the top three areas on the planet for biodiversity conservation, because of the high number of endemic plant and animal species.
But according to BirdLife International, the birds of the Caribbean are today more threatened than they have ever been in their history primarily due to destruction of their habitats and climate change.
Countries taking part in the festival include: The Bahamas, Saint Lucia, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Bermuda, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Dominica, Trinidad and Tobago, Anguilla, Antigua, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Montserrat, Cayman Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
April 2006
HAMILTON, Bermuda: Conservation organisations throughout the Caribbean on Saturday launched the fifth annual month-long celebration of the region’s unique bird life.
The Caribbean Endemic Bird Festival runs from April 22, "Earth Day," until May 22, "International Biodiversity Day," and is coordinated by the Society for the Conservation and Study of Caribbean Birds (SCSCB).
Activities will range from exhibitions of drawings and paintings by local schoolchildren, public lectures, photographic exhibitions, church services, bird-watching excursions, and theatrical productions in celebration of the region's rich bird life.
In launching the Festival, Andrew Dobson, President of SCSCB, said, "This Festival is a celebration! A celebration of a unique and irreplaceable aspect of Caribbean collective life and culture. In the face of climate change and other ominous environmental threats, both wide-scale education and conservation action is imperative to secure our biodiversity. Thanks to this annual Festival, people will learn to appreciate and value our region's globally significant and highly threatened natural heritage as is clearly illustrated by our bird life.”
More than one in five Caribbean bird species are endemic to the region, that is, they are found nowhere else on the earth. Dobson appealed to the Caribbean public to become more aware of the region’s local plants and animals, and to help conserve them for future generations.
In the first four years of the annual Festival, more than 17,000 persons participated directly, while thousands of others have learned about the bird life and overall biodiversity of the Caribbean through regional media houses, magazines, and the internet.
Dr Lisa Sorenson, Caribbean Ornithologist and Professor in the Department of Biology, Boston University, USA and Vice-president of the Society, said "The Caribbean is blessed with an amazing diversity of birdlife. In addition to the many endemics, the islands also provide a home for many migratory species, which may spend up to nine months of the year here. The residents and migrants all depend on the food, water, and shelter that is provided in our forest, scrub and wetland habitats. It is the responsibility of every Caribbean national to cherish and protect these beautiful birds and their habitats. The festival is a wonderful opportunity to call attention to and celebrate our collective natural heritage."
Members of the international conservation community have called the Festival an unprecedented opportunity for education and the generation of pride in what is uniquely Caribbean biodiversity.
They have also noted that this is an important call for greater responsibility to safeguard the wider Caribbean environment’s valuable natural assets, to prevent wide-scale extinction and support sustainable development.
The month-long annual Festival is highlighting the fact that the Caribbean islands are recognized as one of the top three areas on the planet for biodiversity conservation, because of the high number of endemic plant and animal species.
But according to BirdLife International, the birds of the Caribbean are today more threatened than they have ever been in their history primarily due to destruction of their habitats and climate change.
Countries taking part in the festival include: The Bahamas, Saint Lucia, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Bermuda, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Dominica, Trinidad and Tobago, Anguilla, Antigua, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Montserrat, Cayman Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.