Action timeline

May 6, 1991 – The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service received a petition from the International Council for Bird Preservation to list the blue-billed curassow as an endangered species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

December 16, 1991 – The Service made a positive 90-day finding on the petition.

March 28, 1994 – The Service published a 12-month finding on the 1991 petition, determining that the blue-billed curassow warranted listing but that protection was precluded due to other listing priorities.

January 12, 1995 – The Service reiterated its “warranted-but-precluded” finding for the blue-billed curassow.

2003 – The Center sued the Service over its delay in issuing proposed listing rules for 73 rare foreign birds in need of protection, including the blue-billed curassow.

May 21, 2004 – The Service published an annual notice continuing to find that the species warranted listing but that protection was precluded due to other priorities.

April 23, 2007 – The Service published yet another annual notice finding that the species warranted listing but was precluded from protection.

July 29, 2008 – The Service published an annual notice finding that the species warranted listing and that it would promptly publish a proposed listing.

July 7, 2009 – The Service finally proposed to list the blue-billed curassow as an endangered species under the federal Endangered Species Act.

October 29, 2013?? In response to the decades-old listing petitions and a series of lawsuits by the Center, the Fish and Wildlife Service finally?designated?four rare bird species from Colombia (the?blue-billed curassow,?brown-banded antpitta,?Cauca guan and?gorgeted wood-quail) and one Ecuadorian hummingbird species (Esmeraldas woodstar) as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

Blue-billed curassow photo © Heath Wolfeld