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SAVING THE st. Lucia Forest Thrush

The St. Lucia forest thrush is a subspecies of the forest thrush endemic to the small, lush Caribbean island of St. Lucia. The primary threat to this bird is habitat loss: The remaining forests on St. Lucia’s public lands have been subject to large-scale deforestation, and nearly half the natural forest on St. Lucia is privately owned, leaving  these birds highly vulnerable to timber harvest, farming, and development — and rapidly in decline. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen island birds pushed to the brink of extinction. Not too long ago, the Grand Cayman thrush, a close relative of the St. Lucia forest thrush, went extinct as the species vanished right along with its habitat.   

Thanks to years of litigation by the Center, in 2008 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to list the St. Lucia forest thrush under the Endangered Species Act.

KEY DOCUMENTS
2008 federal Endangered Species Act listing proposal
2008 federal notice that species warrants listing
1984 12-month finding that the species warrants listing

ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT PROFILE

ACTION TIMELINE

NATURAL HISTORY

MEDIA
Press releases
Search our newsroom for the St. Lucia forest thrush

RELATED ISSUES
International Program
International Birds Initiative
The Endangered Species Act

Contact: Jacki Lopez

St. Lucia forest thrush photo © Sveta Ashby/
www.birdfinders.co.uk