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An ancient forest in Ecuador is the last stand for a tiny hummingbird facing extinction

Sparkling Violetear hummingbirds flutter at the Yanacocha Reserve in Nono, Ecuador, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026.
Sparkling Violetear hummingbirds flutter at the Yanacocha Reserve in Nono, Ecuador, Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026. Copyright  AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa
Copyright AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa
By Cesar Olmos and Gonzalo Solano with AP
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The species is at risk as high-altitude forests are cleared for grazing and agriculture.

Deep in the Ecuadorian Andes, an ancient forest stands as a final sanctuary against the encroachment of human activity. This is the Yanacocha Reserve, the last refuge for the Black-breasted puffleg (Eriocnemis nigrivestis), a tiny hummingbird teetering on the edge of extinction.

Measuring just nine centimetres, this emblematic bird of Quito is one of the most threatened species on the planet. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, its global population has dwindled to between 150 and 200 birds.

Founded 25 years ago by the Jocotoco Foundation, the Yanacocha Reserve has become a centrepiece for Andean biodiversity.

'Conserving an entire ecosystem'

“We realised we were conserving an entire ecosystem, not just one species,” says conservationist Paola Villalba.

The bird is easily identified by the striking white 'trousers' of feathers around its legs, which contrast sharply with its deep, metallic black chest and bronze-green wings. Despite its beauty, its survival is at risk as high-altitude forests are cleared for grazing and agriculture.

Shirley Farinango, of the Birds and Conservation Foundation, notes that the pressure is most intense because the puffleg occupies a narrow ecological niche between 3,000 and 3,500 metres above sea level. This specific elevation, she said, is “prime territory" to be converted to agricultural land.

On the slopes of the Pichincha volcano, 45 kilometres northwest of Quito, conservationists are now racing to restore this cloud-shrouded forest.

For the 'smallest fairies' of the Andes, these dense trees are more than just a habitat – they are their last stand.

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