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The Abaco National Park:
This National Park, comprising 20,500 acres in
Southern Abaco near Hole In The Wall, has been designated a
preservation area by the Bahamas Government and is managed by The
Bahamas National Trust. Included are 5,000 acres of pine forest –
the nesting area and habitat of about 1000 endangered Bahama or
"Abaco" Parrots. The parrots once lived on as many as seven islands
in The Bahamas, but now only exist in Abaco and Great Inagua.
The forest is valuable to the parrots for several reasons: during
the breeding season, parrots feed on the seeds from the pine trees,
which provide a rich source of protein for developing chicks, and
they nest in limestone cavities on the ground of the pine forest.
They are known to be the only species of parrots throughout the
islands of the Caribbean that nests in the ground. This works
against them, though, because they become vulnerable to predators
like wild cats, wild boars, crabs and snakes, plus heavy rains
during the nesting period can flood parrot nest holes, killing young
chicks.
A subspecies of the Cuban Amazon parrot, the Bahama Parrot is 12-13
inches in length and its white head and mostly green body make it
easily recognizable. In fact, the Bahama Parrot’s scientific name
(Amazona lecocephala bahamensis) literally means, "white headed
Amazon parrot from The Bahamas.” It has patches of red feathers on
its cheek, throat and sometimes its abdomen; its flight feathers,
usually hidden from sight when it is perched in a tree, are a
beautiful cobalt blue. Another distinctive feature of the Bahama
parrot: it has two toes facing forwards and two facing backwards – a
configuration known as zygodactylism.
It is said that Columbus was so struck by their numbers when he made
landfall in The Bahamas in 1492, he wrote in his log, "Flocks of
parrots darken the sun." The Bahama parrot was recognized as the
official mascot of the 500th Anniversary of Columbus’ Landfall in
the New World in 1992. Bahama parrots bones found on New Providence
have been dated back to the Pleistocene Era, more than 50,000 years
ago.
The Bahamas National Trust reports that there are now less than
3,000 Bahama parrots remaining in The Bahamas. These birds are
protected under the Wild Bird (Protection) Act and it is illegal to
harm, capture or offer these birds for sale. Stringent rules and
regulations are enforced in the event that anyone tries to harm the
parrots. The Convention for the International Trade of Endangered
Species (CITES) list the Bahama parrot in Appendix I meaning that it
is a species that is near extinction or very endangered.
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