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Animal Database
O'ahu ʻElepaio
6a00e5505da1178834017617029e4c970c-800wi
Information
Range Hawaiian Island of Oahu.
Scientific Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Class Aves
Order Passeriformes
Family Monarchidae
Genus Chasiempis
Species Chasiempis ibidis
Conservation Status
ENSpecies
Endangered

The Oʻahu ʻelepaio (Chasiempis ibidis), is a species of monarch flycatcher found on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu.

It is now restricted to an area of 47 square kilometers (18 sq mi) in the Koʻolau and Waiʻanae ranges, where a fragmented population of 1,200-1,400 birds occurs. It is listed as endangered; avian malaria and fowlpox are widespread in the population and although it appears to have weathered the worst of it, it is threatened by a combination of these diseases and predation of nestlings, eggs and adult females by rats. In areas where rats are controlled, survival and nest success are higher. Recently completed surveys of populations in the Koʻolau range have unexpectedly revealed that the population has largely remained stable since surveys conducted in the 1990s. However, only about 20 individuals are left on the windward side of the Koʻolau range, with some valleys containing only a single ʻelepaio. Without intervention, this population faces extirpation in the near future due to small population phenomena. This species looks very similar to the Hawaiʻi ʻelepaio, but the white underside extends to the flanks and further up the breast, and the upperside - especially the head - is more rust-colored.

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