Curator of Botany & Horticulture
Java, Indonesia, is the species’ home. Here you can find the largest market for the trade of songbirds on Earth. It’s a trade of great complexity, in part rooted deeply in centuries of Indonesian tradition, and also driven by modern demand for the rarest species around.
Javan green magpie are particularly sought out for multiple reasons. They have a striking appearance – bright apple green feathers along the full length of the body, contrasting brown wings, a bright red beak and legs, and their charismatic black “bandit’s mask” (a layer of glossy black feathers surrounding the eye).
Their extraordinary vocal range also makes them desirable in the lucrative industry of birdsong contests – not as an entry bird itself, but rather as a bird used to ‘train’ contest species with unusual calls. On top of the demand for magpie poaching in the wild, add significant loss of Java’s submontane and montane forest that the species prefers as habitat, and you have a real difficult situation on your hands.
Despite this, there’s much we can still do to prevent the extinction of the Javan green magpie, but it is important to iterate just how on the brink they stand currently as a species considered Critically Endangered by the IUCN.
In the last 21 years of study of the Javan green magpie, the species has only been sighted within four individual protected areas on Java. Four protected populations sounds comforting… however, the last confirmed observation of the bird by scientists was in 2014, that’s eight years ago. Even then, this record was only the detection of their calls, rather than a visual sighting.
While they’ve been lost to science in this period, they are still out there, in small numbers. We know this because wild birds continue to turn up in the bird trade – on rare occasion in physical markets, but by far more commonly on the web trade.
We must find and protect the very last Javan green magpies out there; it’s likely no more than a couple of hundred remain now. This protection is what the Javan green magpie project aims to achieve, funded by the EAZA Silent Forest Programme.
Chester Zoo Conservation Scholar
Former Chester Zoo Conservation Scholar
There’s much research to be done on the Javan green magpie project’s long road ahead, much of which will rely in forging strong bonds with the people at the centre of the songbird trade. It’s critical that we do not see trappers and traders as the enemy of conservation, but rather the answer to the decline of wild songbirds. Their knowledge of the species in the wild will likely be a key component to understanding and protecting it in the years ahead.
Finding what’s left of the wild populations, protecting remaining habitat, and addressing the root causes of habitat loss and the songbird trade together may well mean that in the decades ahead the return of unique birdsong to Java’s silent forests may become reality.