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Where to now? An uncertain future for Jamaica's largest endemic vertebrate

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2014

Rick van Veen*
Affiliation:
Department of Life Sciences, University of the West Indies, Mona, Kingston, Jamaica.
Byron S. Wilson
Affiliation:
Department of Life Sciences, University of the West Indies, Mona, Kingston, Jamaica.
Tandora Grant
Affiliation:
Applied Animal Ecology Division, San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation Research, San Diego, California, USA
Richard Hudson
Affiliation:
Fort Worth Zoo, Fort Worth, Texas, USA
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Abstract

Type
Conservation news
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2014 

More than 20 years after the endemic Jamaican iguana Cyclura collei was removed from the list of extinct Caribbean iguanas, its fate is again tenuous. Since its rediscovery in 1990, conservation efforts have reversed the species' extinction trajectory. However, it remains a Critically Endangered species. Surviving in just a few square kilometres of the Hellshire Hills in Jamaica, initial estimates suggested as few as 50 adults remained. The remnant population clung to the rugged limestone cliffs in Jamaica's dry forest interior, which provided some level of protection from hunting and exotic predators. Because of high rates of predation, juvenile recruitment was essentially non-existent. Population viability models in 1993 concluded that the remnant, ageing population was doomed unless innovative conservation interventions could be implemented.

Since 1991 two communal nesting sites have been monitored and a subset of hatchlings collected annually and transferred to the Hope Zoo in Kingston. The zoo provides hatchlings a headstart on survival by rearing them to a size at which they are considered safe from exotic predators before they are returned to the wild. A small number (24) have been transferred to U.S. zoos as a hedge against extinction in the wild.

The first headstarted iguanas were released in 1996 and a total of 226 have now been repatriated, with recaptures indicating relatively high survivorship. In 1997 a programme to trap exotic predators, focused on the mongoose, was initiated within the core iguana area. Since then the predator control programme has expanded to include all exotic predators (cats, dogs, feral pigs), using more than 300 traps over a four-fold larger target area. All evidence suggests the iguana population is increasing. Census results from the monitored communal nest sites indicated a six-fold increase in the number of nesting females and hatchlings during 1991–2013.

Although these results are encouraging, the future survival of the Jamaican iguana has become increasingly tenuous. For decades their interior dry limestone forest habitat has been under siege from illegal tree cutting for charcoal production. Expansion of local urban centres, increasing unemployment and dwindling resources have intensified this pressure. Notably, since 2011 chainsaws can be heard from the iguana project's most remote field station, indicating a new level of encroachment into the core iguana conservation area. Campaigning and advocacy to stop this illegal habitat destruction have gone largely unheeded by authorities, and the lack of adequate enforcement has been at least partly responsible for threats against university researchers and students working in the area.

The Hellshire Hills are included in the Portland Bight Protected Area (PBPA), which was designated in 1999 because of the area's importance as a repository of endemic biodiversity. Unfortunately, the PBPA, and the Hellshire Hills in particular, are protected only on paper. Legislation for the protection and management of natural resources in Jamaica is sufficient; genuine political and on-the-ground support, however, is not. Consequently, environmentally damaging development activities, even in government-declared protected areas, continue to counter conservation efforts.

Protection of the remaining primary dry forest in the Hellshire Hills (arguably the best and most extensive in the Caribbean) has been adequately outlined in management plans; however, strategies for education, alternative livelihoods, and sustainable development, particularly eco-friendly tourism, have been cursory and uninspiring. Rather, opportunistic and often poorly conceived plans that disregard the protected area mandate have been proposed, including hotels, resorts and casinos.

In August 2013 the Jamaican government announced that ‘very serious consideration’ had been given to a proposal from foreign investors to develop a massive transshipment port and industrial hub in the PBPA (on the Goat Islands). This controversial development would end a long-standing plan for a biodiversity reserve on the Goat Islands, destroy economically valuable fish sanctuaries, and disrupt natural storm protection. In addition, a large port development would probably involve habitat destruction in the nearby Hellshire Hills on the mainland, threatening the last remaining iguanas.

Local government agencies and conservation partners have agreed that reintroducing Jamaican iguanas to the Goat Islands is critical for their long-term survival, as the mainland population will always be vulnerable to predation by exotic mammals. The eradication of the mongoose and other exotic species from the Goat Islands is an achievable prerequisite to reintroduction of the iguana.

As a poor developing nation that still contains important habitats for global biodiversity, Jamaica is poised to set an example of how the development vs biodiversity conservation conflict plays out. The proposed development of the Goat Islands will provide a test of the government's commitment to biodiversity conservation and the environmental conventions to which it is a signatory.