BirdLife

BirdLife EBA Factsheet

020  Costa Rica and Panama highlands
       
 

Priority

urgent

 

Habitat loss

moderate

 

Knowledge

good

 

Countries

Costa Rica, Panama

 

Area

23000 km2

 

Altitude

montane 1000 - 3800m

       

General characteristics This species-rich EBA extends over both Caribbean and Pacific slopes from the mountainous region of Costa Rica (the northern boundary abuts Lago de Nicaragua on the Nicaragua border) through western Panama to just west of the Panama Canal. Also part of the EBA but isolated from this main mountain chain is Cerro Hoya, at the southern tip of the Azuero peninsula. East of the Panama Canal, the continuation of the main Costa Rica–Panama mountains forms the Darién highlands (EBA 024).

The EBA is centred on the foothills and highlands above c.1,000 m with the upper altitudinal limit extending to the mountain-tops, which reach a maximum height of c.3,800 m. The region is dominated by montane evergreen forest, and at higher altitudes by cloud forest and elfin forest with páramo vegetation above the treeline on the highest mountains.

Restricted-range species This EBA has a particularly distinct avifauna including eight endemic genera-Panterpe, Elvira, Phainoptila, Thryorchilus, Pezopetes, Pselliophorus, Acanthidops and Zeledonia.

Most of the EBA's restricted-range species are forest-dependent, with others occurring in secondary and forest-edge habitats, bamboo thickets and páramo. All the species have their centres of distribution above c.1,000 m, although a number occur below this, and therefore overlap altitudinally with the higher parts of the adjacent Central American Caribbean slope (EBA 019) and South Central American Pacific slope (EBA 021). With the vegetation zones being relatively compressed (and at lower altitudes) on the lower mountains of northern Costa Rica, the altitudinal ranges given in the 'Status and habitat' table may appear artificially large, but the zone of overlap with adjacent lowland and foothill EBA species is probably relatively small at any one locality during a particular season.

A number of species such as Selasphorus ardens and Pselliophorus luteoviridis have extremely small ranges even within the EBA, although the majority of birds are more widespread. Recent exploration of Cerro Hoya at the southern end of the Azuero peninsula resulted in the discovery of a new population of Selasphorus hummingbird, possibly representing a disjunct colony of S. ardens (Engleman 1994), and it seems likely that, with further work, more highland EBA species will be found there. Cephalopterus glabricollis breeds in this EBA, but outside the breeding season birds undertake an altitudinal migration downslope to the Central American Caribbean slope (EBA 019).

Black Guan (Chamaepetes unicolor)

NT

Black-breasted Wood-quail (Odontophorus leucolaemus)

LC

Buff-fronted Quail-dove (Geotrygon costaricensis)

LC

Rufous-breasted Quail-dove (Geotrygon chiriquensis)

LC

Sulphur-winged Parakeet (Pyrrhura hoffmanni)

LC

Red-fronted Parrotlet (Touit costaricensis)

VU

Bare-shanked Screech-owl (Megascops clarkii)

LC

Dusky Nightjar (Caprimulgus saturatus)

LC

Fiery-throated Hummingbird (Panterpe insignis)

LC

White-tailed Emerald (Elvira chionura)

LC

Coppery-headed Emerald (Elvira cupreiceps)

LC

Black-bellied Hummingbird (Eupherusa nigriventris)

LC

White-bellied Mountain-gem (Lampornis hemileucus)

LC

Magenta-throated Woodstar (Calliphlox bryantae)

LC

Volcano Hummingbird (Selasphorus flammula)

LC

Scintillant Hummingbird (Selasphorus scintilla)

LC

Glow-throated Hummingbird (Selasphorus ardens)

VU

Orange-bellied Trogon (Trogon aurantiiventris)

LC

Prong-billed Barbet (Semnornis frantzii)

LC

Bare-necked Umbrellabird (Cephalopterus glabricollis)

VU

Dark Pewee (Contopus lugubris)

LC

Ochraceous Pewee (Contopus ochraceus)

LC

Black-capped Flycatcher (Empidonax atriceps)

LC

Golden-bellied Flycatcher (Myiodynastes hemichrysus)

LC

Silvery-fronted Tapaculo (Scytalopus argentifrons)

LC

Ruddy Treerunner (Margarornis rubiginosus)

LC

Streak-breasted Treehunter (Thripadectes rufobrunneus)

LC

Yellow-winged Vireo (Vireo carmioli)

LC

Silvery-throated Jay (Cyanolyca argentigula)

LC

Black-and-yellow Silky-flycatcher (Phainoptila melanoxantha)

LC

Long-tailed Silky-flycatcher (Ptilogonys caudatus)

LC

Ochraceous Wren (Troglodytes ochraceus)

LC

Timberline Wren (Thryorchilus browni)

LC

Black-faced Solitaire (Myadestes melanops)

LC

Black-billed Nightingale-thrush (Catharus gracilirostris)

LC

Sooty Thrush (Turdus nigrescens)

LC

Flame-throated Warbler (Parula gutturalis)

LC

Collared Redstart (Myioborus torquatus)

LC

Black-cheeked Warbler (Basileuterus melanogenys)

LC

Wrenthrush (Zeledonia coronata)

LC

Volcano Junco (Junco vulcani)

LC

Peg-billed Finch (Acanthidops bairdii)

LC

Sooty-faced Finch (Arremon crassirostris)

LC

Large-footed Finch (Pezopetes capitalis)

LC

Yellow-thighed Finch (Pselliophorus tibialis)

LC

Yellow-green Finch (Pselliophorus luteoviridis)

VU

Blue-and-gold Tanager (Bangsia arcaei)

NT

Spangle-cheeked Tanager (Tangara dowii)

LC

Slaty Flowerpiercer (Diglossa plumbea)

LC

Sooty-capped Bush-tanager (Chlorospingus pileatus)

LC

Golden-browed Chlorophonia (Chlorophonia callophrys)

LC

Black-thighed Grosbeak (Pheucticus tibialis)

LC

Threats and conservation There has been widespread destruction of the highland forests in this region, primarily as a result of burning, logging and other conversion leading to intensive agricultural use (Dinerstein et al. 1995). With more than half of Costa Rica's forest having been destroyed since 1940, and a rate of deforestation currently running at 3% per year, it is anticipated that the majority of the remaining highland forest will eventually be found only within existing protected areas (Stiles and Skutch 1989). In Panama, to the east of Chiriquí province, only isolated patches of forest are left within the EBA, and it is likely that some of the restricted-range species formerly present there will now have disappeared from the area (W. J. Adsett . 1993).

Three of the restricted-range species are considered threatened: Cephalopterus glabricollis, principally because of its reliance on both lowland and highland forest at different times in its annual cycle; Pselliophorus luteoviridis, due to its minute range in an area lacking any formal protection (Collar et al. 1994); and Selasphorus ardens, also due to its minute range which, however, is now thought to include Cerro Hoya National Park (Wege and Long 1995). This EBA is the main breeding stronghold for the widespread, threatened (Vulnerable) Three-wattled Bellbird Procnias tricarunculata, and also for the Resplendent Quetzal Pharomachrus mocinno (Near Threatened).

In Costa Rica the remaining forest is now reasonably well protected within the existing protected-area system. However, apart from La Amistad International Park (and adjacent reserves), highland forest in Panama is afforded little protection. Nine Key Areas for threatened birds have been identified within the EBA (four in Costa Rica and five in Panama): Rincón de la Vieja National Park, Braulio Carillo National Park, Monteverde Biological Reserve, La Selva Protection Zone, La Amistad International Park, Volcán Barú National Park, Cerro Hoya National Park, La Fortuna Water Production Reserve and Fortuna Forest Reserve; six of these areas are formally protected (Wege and Long 1995).

Citation BirdLife International 2003 BirdLife's online World Bird Database: the site for bird conservation. Version 2.0. Cambridge, UK: BirdLife International. Available: http://www.birdlife.org (accessed 2/9/2010)

Note Information presented in this factsheet reflects that published in ‘Endemic Bird Areas of the World’ (BirdLife International, 1998). As such, there may be discrepancies between this information and that presented in BirdLife’s (more recently updated) species and IBA factsheets. We plan to revise the EBA analysis in the near future to take account of these and other changes.


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