I just finished my
trip to Honduras. I’ve really enjoyed
meeting with birders from many of the bird clubs in Honduras, and laying the
groundwork for establishing a network of sister birding clubs between the U.S.
and Honduras. To wrap up my trip, I have
spent the last nine days participating in the Honduras Birding for Conservation Tour.
This
Tour was the first of its kind in the country.
The main purpose of the Tour was to bring attention to Honduras as a
safe, bio-diverse, and exciting place for avitourists to visit. The hope is that more avitourists coming to
enjoy the country will translate into more protection for the birds that
avitourists want to experience, and especially for the habitats on which those
birds depend.
Five teams
of ten birders each competed for nine days to see (and/or hear) as many bird
species as possible in designated counting areas. Each of these teams was led by a dynamic duo
composed of an internationally known bird tour leader and a local Honduran bird
guide. Each of the five teams was
outfitted with a bus and driver to take us to the counting areas each day, and
to transport us to three different geographic areas of the country over the
nine days of the Tour.
Our Team was first headquartered at
the Pico Bonito Lodge for four days of birding the rainforest and coastal
marshes of the north coast. Then we
traveled to the more arid and higher area around the City of Copan (where we
stayed at the Hotel Marina Copan) and the Mayan ruins in western Honduras. Our team wrapped up the Tour by being
headquartered for a couple days at Panacam Lodge in Cero Azul Meambar National
Park near Lake Yojoa more in the central part of the country.
The Tour
has been a fun, exhausting, and informative time. The President of Honduras, Juan Hernandez,
has supported this Tour by contributing $20,000 U.S. in prize money to be
awarded to in-country conservation projects, facilitating infrastructure
improvements for the Tour, ensuring official media coverage, and providing (unnecessary)
extra security for participants. An
additional $15,000 U.S. (approximately) was donated by corporate sponsors. The funds provided by the President and the
sponsors were available to be designated by the competing teams to various
conservation programs within the country.
I’ll
write about our birding experiences in another blog post. I’ll also write about the in-country
conservation programs that received the funds designated by the winning
teams. For now, suffice it to say that
the team on which I participated came in third, and was honored to designate
$5,000 to a conservation program. The
remainder of this blog post will focus more on some musings about conservation
that emerged during my participating in the Tour.
What’s in a name?
This
incredible event was called the Honduras Birding for Conservation Tour. The website that attracted me to want to participate,
various emails, Facebook posts, and discussions with Tour organizers all made important
points about conservation. Media about
the event raised awareness about conservation needs and conservation successes
in Honduras. The Tour raised and
distributed more than $35,000 U.S. to three different conservation programs. Many participants said they would return, and
bring their friends with them next time.
This will produce additional conservation benefits.
These all are important points. By many measures, the Tour was a huge success for Honduras. Yet, I still am left pondering about the
connections between these points (and many other possible ones) and bird
conservation in Honduras. If you connect
some of those points, what does the picture look like?
Connecting the dots.
Just like there are many stars in
the night sky, there are many points of light associated with this tour. Turning those various points into a “Bird Conservation”
constellation requires connecting the dots.
But, this does not mean connecting the dots in some
haphazard way. Think about all those stars in the night
sky. Recognizing which stars make up
specific constellations requires both an understanding of the stories behind
the naming of the constellations, and enough imagination to visualize the
appropriate connections between stars.
Drawing of Johan Bayer's "Southern Birds" showing some
bird constellations in the southern sky, including Toucana
in the center of the drawing.
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Understanding and imagination. Both are important, and neither occur by
magic. Developing understanding and
imagination takes focused engagement and transformative experiences. Here are
some examples of what I mean.
First, this Tour was set up as a fun competition with a goal of
seeing as many species as possible. Many
of us (50 birders mostly from the U.S., U.K., and South Africa) did not know very well very many of the birds of Central America. Because of this, we spent a lot of birding in
more open, disturbed habitats where (1) it was
Our approach to Tour, however, meant that we focused more on wracking up
numbers of species rather than developing an understanding of the special birds
associated with the less-disturbed habitats that are most under threat of being lost. I wonder what it would have been like to focus on visiting
natural habitats and trying to identify as many of those species as possible so
we could compare the specific list of species and the diversity of species in
those areas with birds in the disturbed habitats.
This point was driven home for me this morning when I birded my local patch in Ithaca, NY for the first time in about five weeks. I conduct an eBird point count in my local woods, and it's always pretty "slim pickins" in terms of diversity and abundance in winter. The "pickins" are made even slimmer by the fact that most of our "birds of winter" -- Black-capped Chickadees, Northern Cardinals, Tufted Titmice, Black-eyed Juncos, Downy Woodpeckers, etc. -- can be pulled out of the woods to the smorgasbord of backyard feeders that exist in my general vicinity. My 30-minute point count this morning revealed two American Crows and one Blue Jay. The resident "birds of winter" sometimes are found in this patch of "natural habitat", but today they were elsewhere -- probably in very disturbed habitats in local backyards.
In Honduras, many of the resident birds are not likely to be drawn out of their natural habitat to attend feeding stations. Obviously, a few exceptions exist. Some of the bigger, charismatic species like Keel-billed Toucan, Collared Aracari, and some of the Motmots certainly will come to feeding stations. But most of the interior forest birds will be found only in the interior forest. If you want to encounter them, you have to go to them. If you want to understand their habitat needs, you have to go where they live. If you want to imagine what it is like to encounter a mixed-flock of interior forest birds attending an ant swarm, you have to immerse yourself in the interior forest habitats.
Second, while birding around Honduras, we constantly saw the private
homes of everyday Hondurans literally scratching out a living from the
landscape. These hard-working,
hospitable people survive on an average of about $300 per month per family. They
live with 3 or more generations of family members in small 3- or
4-room homes
constructed of cinderblocks and stucco on concrete slabs. These are the very people who cutting the
forest, planting corn, beans, bananas, and other crops on the steep hillsides,
and grazing their few cows, goats, or pigs on forest-converted-to-pasture
areas.
A house on the outskirts of La Ceiba, Honduras. Can we imagine
the joys and challenges of day-to-day living for most Hondurans?
Photo credit: Jody Enck.
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On one hand, we might say it is logical to comprehend why Even more
importantly, how does eco-tourism -- as we experienced it -- help us understand their situation or help us
imagine what it is like to eke out an existence in this landscape?
We saw these conditions with our very own eyes. We gained
information and knowledge about the situation.
We even said hello to a man and some boys unloading a cart of furniture at the back of a small wooden house. We stood mere feet away from Hondurans living out their lives in their world, but the lives we participants lived were so far apart from the Honduran lives being lived out right in front of us. How might we have done something different to expand our imagination so that we could
actually understand how to make sense out of the information and knowledge we
were gaining?
For the most part, we never really engaged with the people living on the landscape. We rarely talked with them, ate meals with them, or spent the night in their homes. We never had to cook food we had to grow ourselves or barter for with some little thing we could offer to others in the community. Instead, we walked on, often right past their homes, often glancing out of the corner of our eyes but not wanting to make eye contact with them or not really wanting to think about the conditions these strong, humble people endure.
In an effort to survive in a challenging world, local residents clearly are having a very large impact on habitat for resident and migratory birds in Honduras. Many of those residents probably know little about the birds in the habitats being lost, and they probably know little about the ecological consequences of their day-to-day actions. These conditions contribute to a very dark night sky for birds and their conservation. Increasing awareness of birds, their habitat needs, and the consequences of habitat loss can indeed be akin to having some bright stars in that night sky. But, these stars certainly have little or no relationship to a bird conservation constellation in that night sky.
For the most part, we never really engaged with the people living on the landscape. We rarely talked with them, ate meals with them, or spent the night in their homes. We never had to cook food we had to grow ourselves or barter for with some little thing we could offer to others in the community. Instead, we walked on, often right past their homes, often glancing out of the corner of our eyes but not wanting to make eye contact with them or not really wanting to think about the conditions these strong, humble people endure.
In an effort to survive in a challenging world, local residents clearly are having a very large impact on habitat for resident and migratory birds in Honduras. Many of those residents probably know little about the birds in the habitats being lost, and they probably know little about the ecological consequences of their day-to-day actions. These conditions contribute to a very dark night sky for birds and their conservation. Increasing awareness of birds, their habitat needs, and the consequences of habitat loss can indeed be akin to having some bright stars in that night sky. But, these stars certainly have little or no relationship to a bird conservation constellation in that night sky.
Bringing people to Honduras to see birds, lots of birds, at
least some of which are birds with which the birders may be familiar from back
home is a good thing. Its a star in an otherwise dark night sky. Making people
aware that you can see a diversity of birds in good numbers, and that you can
bird safely here in Honduras is a good thing.
It's another bright star in the night sky. Demonstrating to birders
that there is an existing tourism and lodge infrastructure available to them is
a good thing. More bright stars in the night sky. What, if any, connections do these stars have to the bird conservation constellation?
Which stars in the dark, night sky make up the "bird conservation
constellation"? Image credit: Theheavensdeclare.net.
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Understanding and imagination. How can we birders understand what is needed for bird conservation to be successful in Honduras or in our hometowns? How can birders expand their imaginations about how birds use their habitats and about how people living close to the land live-out their lives in ways that are more consistent with bird conservation? Perhaps by more closely engaging with birds in the most imperiled habitats and with local residents -- living a day or a week in their shoes -- would help us better understand the stories behind the naming of the bird conservation constellations, and broaden our imaginations enough to better visualize the appropriate connections between stars in the night sky that reveal the bird conservation constellations.
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