Cristóbal Pizarro

The Omora Bird Observatory – Long Term Ornithological Studies and Conservation in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve

Omora Park.

Environmental education Park Omora.

Censistas.

Preschoolar birding workshop.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Omora Ethnobotanical Park, Cape Horn Biosphere ReserveChileBirds, Central and Latin America, Community, Marine4 Feb 2009

As the most diverse and abundant vertebrates in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, coastal-marine birds are an important aspect of the biota of the subantarctic archipelago. This project will implement a long-term monitoring program to detect potential effects of global ecological change. These results will complement the Omora Ethnobotanical Park’s ongoing long-term socio-ecological research and outreach program. It will integrate results with the public and decision-makers via a course in the local school and develop ethical ecotourism-bird watching workshops for tourism operators.

In order to determine effects of development, tourism, invasive species, and other components of global ecological change, the project’s first priority is to establish a general baseline of information on shore and marine birds, which include; describe the inter-annual and intra-annual variation of shore and marine avian communities in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve; record ecologically-relevant natural history data on reproducing colonies of marine birds; synthesize and utilize information accumulated from multiple sources in a rigorous, unified database.

Additionally, the local-based education and ethical ecotourism program of this project will take place in the town of Puerto Williams, which has 2,200 inhabitants and is southernmost settlement in the world. Target groups will include: i) the permanent Omora Natural History Course in the local school, ii) the local Scout troop, and iii) the Puerto Williams tourism board.

These conservation efforts will be a “value-added” addition to another Omora Park project by adding new content to the implementation of a “Coastal Trail” at the Omora Park, which will include the observation of coastal microbiodiversity (such lichens, mosses, algae and intertidal macroinvertebrates) and also the marine-terrestrial gradient of birds. This trail will also be used for the “ethical birding” workshops with local tourism operators. In this way, the broader impact of the outreach component will include tourism operators throughout the region in Magallanes and also tourists, visitors and volunteers who access the trail.

For more information contact jcpizarrop@gmail.com or go to www.osara.org, www.omora.org, www.umag.cl/williams, www.chile.unt.edu

Project Update: May 2009

The first stage of summer bird research and monitoring activities has successfully finished. Those activities included coastal-marine birds’ extensive surveys on north Coast of Navarino Island as a part of ongoing Omora Bird Observatory.

985 birds of 30 species was counted on 34 coastal transects (800 m long × 200 m wide). This census was the first systematic survey conducted in Austral Chile, and allowed Omora`s researchers to start a baseline aimed to monitor coastal-marine birds. Interestingly, two typical terrestrial species (Southern Crested-Caracara and Chimango Caracara,) feeding over invertebrates on intertidal zone, on algae stranded accumulations. Those results add new information over the relevance of sea-land ecotone for bird conservation.

Additionally, education activities were conducted, with the first Ethical birdwatching experience for 15 students of Universidad de Magallanes (Chile) and University of North Texas (USA) and a workshop for preschool (80) and school (60) students and educators (20). Moreover, we celebrated environmental ethics` interactive classes for 26 children of a permanent Omora school workshop.

Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

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Final Report827.5 KB

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