Brazil has more than 1900 bird species, [1] and according to the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation and the Brazilian Ministry of the Environment, there are 240 species or subspecies of Brazilian birds listed as threatened, six as extinct and two as extinct in the wild. [2] [3] The Brazilian definition uses the same criteria and categories of IUCN. [4] Among the 33 orders of birds in Brazil, 22 have threatened species. [1] [3] The passerine order (songbirds), besides being the most diverse order in Brazil, also has the most species on the Brazilian Red List, followed by parrots. [3] [4] The Northeast Region, notably the Atlantic forest and Caatinga, has the most endemic and threatened birds, and two of them, the Alagoas curassow and the Spix's macaw, are considered to be extinct in the wild. [4] The Pernambuco Endemism Center presents many critically endangered species due to the intense destruction of the Atlantic forest. [4] Some species might be extinct in Brazil, like the glaucous macaw and the Eskimo curlew. [4]
A list of threatened species was published by Diário Oficial da União, on December 17, 2014. [3] Even though some species have been removed from the list (for instance, the hyacinth macaw), the number of threatened species has increased in comparison with the former list (which had 160 taxa). [4] Furthermore, the number of known species has been increasing considerably since the last half of the 20th century, and this has influenced the number of listed species. [4]
In spite of using the same criteria, the ICMBio list often shows a different conservation status than the IUCN. [4] That is because the assessments were done at different times by different researchers. [4]
Family Tinamidae
Family Anatidae
Family Cracidae (chachalacas, guans and curassows)
Family Odontophoridae (New World quails)
Family Diomedeidae (albatrosses)
Família Procellariidae (petrels)
Family Phaethontidae
Family Sulidae (boobies)
Family Ardeidae (herons)
Family Accipitridae
Family Psophiidae (trumpeters)
Family Rallidae (rails)
Family Charadriidae (plovers, dotterels, and lapwings)
Family Scolopacidae (sandpipers)
Family Sternidae (terns)
Family Columbidae
Family Cuculidae
Family Strigidae
Family Nyctibiidae
Family Caprimulgidae
Family Trochilidae (hummingbirds)
Family Trogonidae
Family Momotidae (motmots)
Family Bucconidae
Family Capitonidae (American barbets)
Family Ramphastidae (toucans)
Family Picidae (woodpeckers)
Family Psittacidae
Family Thamnophilidae (antbirds)
Family Conopophagidae (gnateaters)
Family Grallariidae (antpittas)
Family Rhinocryptidae (tapaculos)
Family Formicariidae (ground antbirds)
Family Scleruridae (miners and leaftossers)
Family Dendrocolaptidae (woodcreepers)
Família Xenopidae (ovenbirds)
Family Furnariidae (Neotropical ovenbirds)
Family Pipridae (manakins)
Family Tityridae (tityras, mourners and allies)
Family Cotingidae (cotingas and bellbirds)
Family Pipritidae (piprites)
Family Platyrinchidae (calyptura)
Family Rhynchocyclidae (tody-tyrants or bamboo tyrants)
Family Tyrannidae (tyrant flycatchers)
Family Vireonidae (vireos)
Family Corvidae (crows and jays)
Family Turidade (thrushes)
Family Motacillidae (pipits)
Family Passerellidae (New World sparrows)
Family Icteridae (New World blackbirds)
Family Thraupidae (tanagers)
Family Cardinalidae (cardinals)
Family Fringillidae (siskins)