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Lost to science for 126 years: Indigenous Knowledge and Camera Trapping Document the Critically Endangered Black-Naped Pheasant-Pigeon Otidiphaps insularis

Gregg, J. J.; Boersma, J.; Nason, D.; Malesa, E.; Le Breton, C.; Ketaloya, S.; Iova, B.; Mittermeier, J. C.

2024-12-20 ecology
10.1101/2024.12.17.628566 bioRxiv
Show abstract

We combined questionnaires collecting local ecological knowledge with passive and directed camera trapping and bird surveys to scientifically document the Black-Naped Pheasant-Pigeon Otidiphaps insularis for the first time since 1896. This species is endemic to Fergusson Island, in eastern Papua New Guinea, and is New Guineas most endangered terrestrial bird species. Indigenous subsistence-based hunters who participated in this research as informants had high levels of local bird knowledge and helped direct camera trapping for one of two successful camera trap captures. Local participants also shared traditional ecological knowledge about the Black-Naped Pheasant-Pigeon, including legends, chants, and a local name for this taxon, Auwo. The scarcity of observations over the course of a month-long expedition, its obscurity to the majority of local respondents interviewed, and prevalent threats from habitat destruction and introduced alien species further support its current Red List status (CR). Our results provide a case study for leveraging local ecological knowledge in combination with standardized survey techniques and may be an especially effective strategy for determining the status of other undocumented or data-deficient species in the southwest Pacific.

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