This Canary Islands stonechat is now considered
Endangered, as construction, mainly
tourism-related, encroaches upon the best habitat (Illera
et al., 2006). The population is hard to estimate, but most probably between 1300 and 1700 mature birds (BirdLife International 2004), and recognisably in decline. In particular, heavy land clearance on the
Jandía peninsula is isolating the local subpopulation and making it vulnerable to adverse effects of
small population size.
Desertification, exacerbated by grazing
goats and locally sinking
water tables, has also contributed to habitat loss.
Feral cats and
black rats prey on the eggs and young. A conservation action plan has existed for this species since 1999 (BirdLife International 2004). Due to its fairly high
reproductive rate, if enough habitat is secured and predators are kept at bay, it should be able to hold its own. The
Chinijo chat,
subspecies murielae from the
Chinijo Archipelago near
Lanzarote, became
extinct in the early 20th century. Usually claimed as mainly due to deteriorating habitat quality, the extinction may be more due to the effect of introduced predators. It was only reported to inhabit two offshore islands (
Montaña Clara and
Alegranza). ==References==