The
IUCN has assessed the blue-bearded helmetcrest as Endangered. Its population is estimated to be 250 – 999 mature individuals and is believed to be declining. The species was known only from 62 museum specimens with the most recent record in 1946. Surveys during 1999-2003 failed to detect the species. Brief surveys in February 2007 and December 2011 also failed to detect the species. In March 2015, the blue-bearded helmetcrest was rediscovered by researchers from the foundation
ProAves while documenting fires set by local farmers. Though the species' entire range is nominally protected in Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta National Park, Indigenous people regularly burn the
páramo to produce cattle pasture and collect
Libanothamnus occultus for firewood. ==References==