Least Concern
In accordance with IUCN criteria, a species is considered to be Least Concern if it does not qualify for Critically Endangered, Endangered, Vulnerable or Near Threatened. Widespread and abundant taxa are included in this category.
Species data
Class
Aves
Order
Passeriformes
Family
Thraupidae
Scientific Name
Bangsia melanochlamys
Reserve locations
-
Description
A stocky, short-tailed tanager, measuring 15 cm in length and weighing 35-44.5 g. Both sexes are similar, with black upperparts, head, breast sides, and flanks, a golden-yellow to orange upper breast, and bright yellow mid-breast, belly and undertail-coverts, with bright blue uppertail-coverts, lesser and median upperwing-coverts. Bill and legs are blackish. The immature plumage has yet to be described.
Contact calls include a sharp ‘tsit’ and ‘pit-pit-pit’. The song is high-pitched ‘tsit-tsit-sii’.
Behaviour
Habitat
Threats and Conservation
The Black-and-gold Tanager is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. The population is estimated to be between 1,000-2,499 individuals and is thought to be slowly declining due to deforestation within their restricted range for cattle ranching, mining, small-scale agriculture, logging, and road building. Protected areas do not cover their full altitudinal range. This species is probably dependent on primary forest, much of which is being lost, especially below 1,500 m.
Created in 1990 by WLT partner Fundación Guanacas Bosques de Niebla, the Guanacas Reserve protects 520 ha (1,285 acres) of cloud forest and naturally regenerating pasture in the Andes of north-western Columbia.
WLT is supporting a project by partner Fundación Guanacas Bosques de Niebla to expand the Guanacas Reserve and safeguard the montane forest vital to the long-term survival of the Black-an-gold Tanager.