| Orinoco Goose Nestbox Project |
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The Orinoco Goose is a threatened South American tropical species partial to dense, lowland, jungle-lined rivers, streams and other wetlands in open grasslands with scattered trees, particularly the llanos. This species represents the only true forest goose.
In the not-too-distant past, the geese were regarded as among the most numerous of the Orinoco River waterfowl, but they are presently scarce except in remote or protected regions. A recent survey conducted by a Foundation field researcher indicated that tropical rainforest destruction, especially due to cattle ranching in the llanos, has accelerated the population decline. Nearing extinction in Peru, the vulnerable geese have vanished from parts of Columbia and have disappeared from navigable rivers elsewhere.
The llanos of Venezuela appears to be the Orinoco's last remaining stronghold and is the focus area for the nestbox project. The birds nest almost exclusively in the holes of large trees. The clearing of forests from the rivers edge to obtain pasture is forcing the birds to seek nesting sites as far as twenty miles from a water source. This is not a sustainable situation for the llanos geese.
GO TO Venezuela Update
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