Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas

by One Earth Conservation, Inc.
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Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas
Saving Parrots and Aiding People in the Americas

Project Report | Jun 22, 2026
2026 Report #2

By Gail Koelln | Co-director

Solider with macaw chick in Honduras
Solider with macaw chick in Honduras

The following summary outlines One Earth Conservation’s key accomplishments to conserve parrots and empower communities across the Americas between January to May 2026:

Guatemala – Yellow-headed Amazon (Amazona oratrix) Conservation

On the Atlantic coast of Guatemala, the breeding season of the yellow-headed parrot (Amazona oratrix) is one of the most significant and crucial times of the year. It is a period when life begins quietly inside the parrots’ nests, while fieldwork increases to protect this fragile and important process. The project started in March with local conservationists searching for nest locations. Long field walks, patient observation, and careful attention to the landscape helped them to identify both natural nests and nest boxes used by the parrots. In April, the project moved into its most intense phase: nest monitoring, patrolling, and protection, which will continue through June. Project participants are planning to do an annual parrot population count in July 2026.

During the breeding season, time, the team regularly visits nesting sites, observes carefully, records behavior, and ensures safe conditions for chick development. At the same time, protection actions are strengthened to reduce the risk of poaching, one of the main threats to the species. This work is the result of a collaboration between the field team, the National Council of Protected Areas (CONAP), and the National Civil Police of Guatemala, whose presence in the area is key to strengthening nest protection and responding to threats. Throughout this season, field work has shown a constant reality: conservation is not a single action, but a long-term presence in the territory built through patience, coordination, and daily commitment.

During the 2026 season, we have monitored 14 active nests to date (10 yellow-headed amazon and 4 red-lored amazon). So far, 22 yellow-headed fledglings and 6 red-lored fledglings have successfully fledged, for a current total of 28 fledglings. However, the season is not yet complete. Two nests are still being monitored, and we are awaiting confirmation on whether additional fledglings were produced in some nests.

Honduras – Unconditional Solidarity Campaign Launched Successfully

In March and April, LoraKim spent 9.5 weeks camping with the Indigenous parrot conservationists in La Moskitia, Honduras. She did this for many reasons, but primarily to witness oppressions threatening the people and people there, and to practice Unconditional Solidarity. Unconditional Solidarity (US) is inescapable: our well-being is deeply interconnected. We need one another, and none of us is free until all are free. But living and organizing society around this truth requires intention, practice, commitment, and kindness. Without that effort, we can be swept along by forces that harm rather than help.

We undertook this US campaign at this time because of the urgency of the parrot crisis in the world, and in La Moskitia, Honduras. Every year the international demand for parrots as pets increases, placing at risk the people of La Moskitia, their ecosystem, and their cultural and spiritual heritage that depends on a flourishing parrot population. Transformative conservation in this region has had success – there are more parrots flying free there than 20 years ago before the conservation project began, but the success is fragile, and at most like placing a bandage on a gaping wound. There is a much deeper problem. The increasing loss of the forest due to illegal land tenure, the increasing ferociousness of international buyers of the parrots, and decreasing availability of conservation funds now compels an urgency against forces that seem unstoppable.

The campaign has already had some wins. The team has increased social capital, grown awareness, increased funding to the project (although far short of what is needed), and engaged and bonded other Honduran stakeholders so that they see La Moskitia as their people, their parrots, and their project. We grew our understanding of US, practiced it, and protected birds and one another with our physical presence. The work of solidarity never ends and the campaign continues. You can help by being a part of it. You can join the various campaign communication channels (on social media and WhatsApp) and become part of the US community. You can spread the messages and updates about the campaign and the situation there.

Nicaragua – Monitoring of the Yellow-naped Amazon (Amazona auropalliata) on Ometepe Island

OEC and our project partners on Ometepe Island have continued in 2026 to work with six communities on the island as they have in years past. So far in 2026 they have monitored and protected 47 yellow-naped Amazon nests. Unfortunately, many of these nests have been poached, the rate of which is slightly worse than in other years. The next island-wide population count will be conducted in July 2026. LoraKim will travel there to participate in the count for the entire month, and she is also preparing to lead another parrot pilgrimage from December 11 to December 15, 2026. We plan to publish a scientific booklet in 2027 of all the counts and nest monitoring results since 2013.

Paraguay – Multi-species Parrot Conservation

In late 2025, OEC and our partners in Paraguay completed a productive collaboration with World Wildlife Fund Paraguay, which included receiving a $20,000 grant from them. Starting in 2026, we conducted an annual parrot count. Throughout the year we helped staff the project’s Rescue and Liberation Center. Our partnering NGO, Asociación para la Conservación de Psitácidos del Paraguay (ACPP), is managing this center. Our biggest project in Paraguay this year was completing an in-country Parrot Conservation Corps with 120 participants enrolled, though fewer completed the course. During World Parrot Day on May 31, 2026, we supported a webinar series there and are now supporting the beginning of the parrot breeding season, which began in May.

Volcanos at sunset in Nicaragua
Volcanos at sunset in Nicaragua
Peached-fronted parakeets in Paraguay
Peached-fronted parakeets in Paraguay
Parrot rangers in Guatemala
Parrot rangers in Guatemala

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Organization Information

One Earth Conservation, Inc.

Location: Hollis Hills, NY - USA
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Project Leader:
Gail Koelln
Hollis Hills , NY United States

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