Zoo celebrates as 'incredibly rare' chicks hatch
Conservationists from Chester Zoo are celebrating after three "incredibly rare" birds have hatched as part of an international conservation project.
The blue-eyed ground doves, which were reared at the Parque das Aves conservation centre in Brazil, are in danger of becoming extinct, the zoo said.
Bird experts at the zoo have been working on the project alongside colleagues from the South American Country and the USA.
The zoo's head of birds, Andrew Owen, travelled to Brazil to provide technical support for the project, alongside lead keeper for birds, Victoria Kaldis, who helped with the hand-rearing of the chicks.
The zoo said just 11 adult members of the species lived in the wild, but they hoped that chicks hatched in human care could help turn the tide.
The chicks were hatched after being incubated as part of a joint effort between Chester Zoo, Parque das Aves and SAVE Brasil, with support from Toledo Zoo and Bronx Zoo in the USA.
It said this was the most successful hatch since the project began, boosting the survival odds of one of the most endangered birds in the world.
In 2015, the blue-eyed ground dove - Columbina cyanopis - was rediscovered after there had been no confirmed sightings for over 70 years.
The species, which is only found in Brazil, faces threats in the wild including human-caused fires and climate change.
Chester Zoo experts were among a team which carefully selected and incubated a small number of wild-laid eggs, the zoo said.
"It's a real privilege for Chester Zoo to be involved in the work to help conserve the blue-eyed ground dove," Mr Owen said.
"This unique species is on the brink of extinction and without the dedication and passion of all the conservationists involved, including Chester Zoo's bird staff, this bird may be lost forever."
He said the arrival of the chicks built on the successes of 2023 and 2024 and doubled the conservation-breeding insurance population.
Mr Owen said that "around-the-clock care and attention are needed to rear these tiny and delicate birds".
It was hoped that the doves, once mature, would start to breed in their purpose-built aviaries at Parque das Aves, he added.
Paloma Bosso, technical director of Parque das Aves, said it was "a joy and also a great responsibility" to see the three chicks.
"Each hatching represents a real chance to reverse the fate of this species," she said.
Parque das Aves is now home to six blue-eyed ground doves.
The species is critically endangered according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List.
Read more stories from Cheshire on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC North West on X. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.
Zoo receives £4m grant for conservation projects
Breeding hope as rare fossa arrives at zoo from US
Chester Zoo
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Peru gas workers find thousand-year-old mummy
Peruvian gas workers this week found a thousand-year-old mummy while installing pipes in Lima, their company said, confirming the latest discovery of a pre-Hispanic tomb in the capital. The workers found the trunk of a huarango tree (a species native to coastal Peru), "which served as a tomb marker in the past," at a depth of 50 centimeters (20 inches), archaeologist Jesus Bahamonde, scientific coordinator of Calidda gas company, told reporters. The mummy of a boy aged between 10 and 15, was found at a depth of 1.2 meters, he added. "The burial and the objects correspond to a style that developed between 1000 and 1200," he said. The remains discovered on Monday were found "in a sitting position, with the arms and legs bent," according to Bahamonde. They were found in a shroud which also contained calabash gourds. Ceramic objects, including plates, bottles and jugs decorated with geometric figures and figures of fishermen, were found next to the mummy. The tomb and artifacts belong to the pre-Inca Chancay culture, which lived in the Lima area between the 11th and 15th centuries. They were discovered while gas workers were removing earth from an avenue in the Puente Piedra district of northern Lima. In Peru, utility companies must hire archaeologists when drilling the earth, because of the possibility of hitting upon heritage sites. Calidda has made more than 2,200 archaeological finds since 2004. Lima is home to over 500 archaeological sites, including dozens of "huacas" as ancient cemeteries are known in the Indigenous Quechua language. ljc/sf/cb/sla
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Relatives 'gobsmacked' after grave mementos smashed
Relatives of people buried in a Nottinghamshire cemetery say they are 'gobsmacked' after wildlife were blamed for smashing mementos left on graves. Families started a petition in protest after Broxtowe Borough Council said it was going to remove the mementos, which then led the authority to put any changes on hold for 12 months. Visitors say they then found flowers, plant pots and crosses had been overturned last week and were told by the council ants, birds, badgers, foxes and muntjac deer were responsible. But families have blamed council grass cutting, going so far as to stake out the cemetery to see whether animals were causing the problems. Lindsey Collins, 46, from Beeston, whose son, Josh, was buried in the cemetery in 2021, said the problems were noticed on Tuesday 10 June. She said: "The gardeners had been in and after mowing, several graves with pots, ornaments and memorials were damaged. "In all the years we have been in the cemetery this has never happened before. "The odd breakage is to be expected, but this damage was over several sections and areas of the cemetery. "I was disgusted, heartbroken. And with Father's Day coming up I was worried how it was going to affect people." Ms Collins estimated around 20 plots were affected with other visitors visibly distressed. But this turned into surprise when Broxtowe Borough Council denied its gardeners were responsible. "They said it was ants," said Ms Collins. "They said the ants were nesting in the tubs and then birds were coming to peck at them and then knocking the vases which then get caught in the long grass and get mowed. "Then apparently badgers, foxes and muntjac deer also knocked over the ornaments. "We were gobsmacked. "So the cemetery committee staked out the area overnight and we never saw any activity from the animals which might explain what happened." A spokesman for Broxtowe Borough Council said: "We have an experienced team that understands the sensitivities of working within our graveyards. "All items are placed at the owner's risk." The wider issue of leaving tributes on graves was discussed by the council earlier this month but a decision was deferred. Follow BBC Nottingham on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@ or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210. Families 'disheartened' by proposed grave rules Broxtowe Borough Council
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Thailand credits prey releases for 'extraordinary' tiger recovery
In the thick, steamy forests of western Thailand, 20 skittish sambar deer dart from an enclosure into the undergrowth -- unaware they may find themselves in the jaws of one of the habitat's 200 or so endangered tigers. The release is part of a project run by the government and conservation group WWF to provide tigers with prey to hunt and eat, which has helped the big cat make a remarkable recovery in Thailand. The wild tiger population in Thailand's Western Forest Complex, near the border with Myanmar, has increased almost fivefold in the last 15 years from about 40 in 2007 to between 179 and 223 last year, according to the kingdom's Department of National Parks (DNP). It is an uptick that WWF's Tigers Alive initiative leader Stuart Chapman calls "extraordinary", especially as no other country in Southeast Asia has seen tiger numbers pick up at all. The DNP and the WWF have been breeding sambar, which are native to Thailand but classed as vulnerable, and releasing them as prey. Now in its fifth year, the prey release is a "very good activity," says the DNP's Chaiya Danpho, as it addresses the ecosystem's lack of large ungulates for tigers to eat. Worrapan Phumanee, a research manager for WWF Thailand, says that deer were previously scarce in the area, impacting the tiger population. But "since starting the project, we've seen tigers become regular residents here and successfully breed," he says. Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam have all lost their native populations of Indochinese tigers, while Myanmar is thought to have just 23 left in the wild, in large part due to poaching and wildlife trafficking. Over the past century numbers worldwide have fallen from about 100,000 individuals to an estimated 5,500, according to the IUCN, which classifies tigers as endangered due to habitat loss and overhunting of the species and their natural prey. But major tiger recoveries have been recorded in India and Nepal, where in recent years numbers of Bengal tigers have grown to 3,600 and 355 respectively thanks to conservation measures. - 'Incredibly successful' - In a forest clearing in Khlong Lan National Park, DNP staff open the gate of the sambar deer enclosure where 10 males and 10 females have been grazing. The deer watch cautiously as one brave individual darts out, before the rest follow at speed and disappear into the trees. Worrapan says prey release programmes -- now also happening in Cambodia and Malaysia -- are part of wider restoration efforts to "rebuild ecosystems" in Southeast Asia, where they have been adapted for local purposes from similar initiatives that have existed for years in Africa. The breeding and releases also aim to solve the problem of the sambar deer's own population decline due to hunting, says Worrapan. "The purpose of releasing deer is not solely to serve as tiger prey but also to restore the deer population," he says, adding that GPS collar-monitoring has allowed researchers to track their lives after release. He says despite having only known captivity, the deer show a strong ability to adapt to outside threats. "(They) don't simply wait passively. They try to evade predators and choose safe areas to thrive." Chaiya says only a small number of the released deer end up as predator dinner, with most going on to reproduce. The sambar deer and their offspring "play a role in the food chain within the ecosystem, serving as prey for predators," he says. sjc/pdw-sah/mtp