One of the World's Rarest Hummingbirds Makes a Dazzling Appearance in Colombia
Photo by Carole Turek
Photo by Carole Turek
APRIL 1, 2024
Lost to science for more than six decades until it was photographed in 2010, the Santa Marta Sabrewing is one of the rarest hummingbirds in the world. Another sighting wasnt documented until Yurgen Vega spotted one in 2022 and embarked on a joint study with researchers from the American Bird Conservancy, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, SELVA, ProCAT Colombia, and World Parrot Trust to trace the creatures habitat and behavior.
Named for its home region in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountains of northern Colombia, the iridescent sabrewing is exceedingly difficult to spot in part because of its limited range. In biology, when an animals established habitat is contained in a small area, it is known as endemism, and this particular specimens home orbit is so finite that it is known as micro-endemic.
The Santa Marta Sabrewring was among the top ten most sought-after specimens in the Search for Lost Birds, a collaboration between American Bird Conservancy, Re:wild, and BirdLife International. When professors Carlos Esteban Lara and Andrés M. Cuervo of Universidad Nacional de Colombia independently found others within the same area, their find spurred a collaborative effort to monitor and study the extremely rare population. Since then, stunning photographs have captured the birds magnificent, jewel-like sheen.
Read more about the studys findings on the American Bird Conservancy website: https://abcbirds.org/news/santa-marta-sabrewing/
The Indigenous communities who own the land where the Santa Marta Sabrewing lives are the stewards of the habitat for the species, and it is ultimately up to them to decide how to conserve it. ABC and our partners want to support these communities in what they need for this conservation effort, much like we have supported local partners and Indigenous communities to conserve threatened birds elsewhere in Latin America.