Hispaniolan Trogon (Priotelus roseigaster), male, family Trogonidae, order Trogoniformes, endemic to Hispaniola (Haitia and Dominican Republic)
photograph by Kenny Díaz Jorge (@kennydiazj)

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Hispaniolan Trogon (Priotelus roseigaster), male, family Trogonidae, order Trogoniformes, endemic to Hispaniola (Haitia and Dominican Republic)
photograph by Kenny Díaz Jorge (@kennydiazj)
Priotelus trogon
Which is the best bird?
Hispaniolan trogon
Cuban trogon
Cuban Trogon
Cuban trogon (Priotelus tempuras)
Photo by JGarfein Photo
[2865/11080] Cuban trogon - Priotelus temnurus
Order: Trogoniformes (trogons and quetzals) Family: Trogonidae
Photo credit: Roberto Jovel via Macaulay Library
Bird of the Week: Hispaniolan Trogon
The colorful Hispaniolan Trogon is found only on the island of Hispaniola, which is shared by Haiti and the Dominican Republic. It is the national bird of Haiti; ironically, it is becoming increasingly rare there due to ongoing habitat loss.
The species is more common in the Dominican Republic, especially in the relatively undisturbed forests of national parks including Sierra de Bahoruco and Nalga de Maco, where ABC has worked, and Valle Nuevo, where ABC partner Sociedad Ornithologica de la Hispaniola (SOH) is working. The trogon shares these forests with other endangered residents, the Bay-breasted Cuckoo and LaSalle’s Thrush, and the migratory Black-capped Petrel and Bicknell’s Thrush.
Like other trogons, the Hispaniolan is a cavity-nester, often using cavities excavated by another island endemic, the Hispaniolan Woodpecker.
This species is one of only two trogons found in the Caribbean. (The other is the Cuban Trogon.) It is a forest-dependent species, and the biggest threats it faces are rampant habitat loss and degradation caused by logging, charcoal production, and clearing for agriculture and settlement.
ABC and partners SOH, Grupo Jaragua, Fundación Loma Quita Espuela, and Vermont Center for Ecostudies continue work to preserve and protect habitat in the Dominican Republic. In one ongoing, historic effort, Black-capped Petrels are tracked via satellite; in another, ABC helped improve habitat protection in Sierra de Bahoruco National Park and the Loma Charco Azul Biological Reserve.
(via American Bird Conservancy)