Once found throughout much of the island of Hispaniola, the endemic Ridgway's Hawk (Buteo ridgwayi) experienced sharp population declines in the mid-1900s. When The Peregrine Fund began studying the Ridgway’s Hawk in 2000, only about 300 remained. This remnant population was restricted to the small Los Haitises National Park on the northeastern coast of the Dominican Republic. Habitat loss was just one of the many threats impacting Ridgway’s Hawks. They were also being shot by people. To make matters worse, botfly infestations frequently killed nestlings, resulting in reproductive rates that could barely sustain this fragile population.
David Anderson
Conserving Birds of Prey in Hispaniola
Our Impacts
Nico Lormand
Conserving Birds of Prey in the Caribbean