BBC Wildlife Magazine

BACK TO NATURE

AT THE AGUARÁ CONSERVATION CENTRE, a stone’s throw from the Argentine city of Corrientes, Mburucuya the red-and-green macaw is ready to fly. As a whistle sounds, the stunning, vermilion-plumaged parrot spreads her wings and launches herself towards the nearest food tray, 25m away down the huge enclosure. She has already followed the same trajectory numerous times today, but practice makes perfect.

Having been born in captivity, Mburucuya needs to master a range of unfamiliar skills before she can venture into the wild. Nearly a year of intensive training has strengthened her wings for long-distance flying. It has also taught her how to avoid predators, socialise with fellow macaws and seek out food. As part of a group of birds performing a similar journey, Mburucuya will soon be released into the Paraná forest of the nearby Iberá Wetlands, where she and fellow returnees will play an increasingly important role dispersing fruits and large seeds from a number of native tree species.

Red-and-green macaws, or as they are called by the indigenous Guaraní people of the region, were once common in the forests of northern Argentina. But by the 20th century, the exotic pet trade, illegal feather trafficking and deforestation had driven them to local extinction. Their comeback in the Iberá Wetlands, which has so

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Wildlife Magazine

BBC Wildlife Magazine2 min read
Impact Of Avian Flu Is Worse Than Feared
A NEW REPORT BY THE RSPB, BTO and other conservation organisations has revealed the true impact of avian flu on the UK’s globally important populations of seabirds. According to the study, the great skua was particularly badly hit, with more than thr
BBC Wildlife Magazine1 min read
Drones Can Help Coral
RESEARCHERS ARE USING UNDERWATER drones to learn about mysterious mesophotic coral ecosystems (MCEs) – low-light habitats in tropical and subtropical regions made up of coral, sponges and algae. Because MCEs are found at depths of 30-150m, which is b
BBC Wildlife Magazine1 min read
Coelacanth
Lived 420 m.y.a to the present day THIS ELUSIVE FISH STILL inhabits some deep parts of the Indian Ocean, but up until the mid-20th century it was thought to be long-extinct. Then, in 1938, a strange-looking, 1.5m-long fish was caught off the coast of

Related Books & Audiobooks