Cabinda

Biodiversity Intelligence Dashboard

Threatened

461

CR + EN + VU

Critically Endangered

252

CR

Endemic Threatened

5

Found only here

Declining

0%

0 species

Category Breakdown

Distribution of 461 threatened species

CR 252
EN 196
CR: 252
EN: 196
VU: 13
Taxonomic Breakdown

Threatened % by group

mammals17/17 (100%)
birds18/18 (100%)
amphibians52/52 (100%)
insects28/28 (100%)
other invertebrates175/175 (100%)
plants168/168 (100%)
fungi3/3 (100%)
molluscs40/40 (100%)
crustaceans12/12 (100%)
arachnids3/3 (100%)
All Species in Cabinda (516)
SpeciesStatusGroupTrend
Mountain ChickenLeptodactylus fallaxCRamphibians?
Central Haitian CurlytailLeiocephalus endomychusCRother invertebrates?
Atalaye Curlytail LizardLeiocephalus pratensisCRother invertebrates?
Lapierre Curlytail LizardLeiocephalus rhutidiraCRother invertebrates?
Gesneria wrightiiCRplants?
Rhytidophyllum rhodocalyxCRplants?
Gesneria glandulosaCRplants?
Navassa Dwarf BoaTropidophis bucculentusCRother invertebrates?
Sierra Curlytail LizardLeiocephalus onaneyiCRother invertebrates?
Cayman Islands Dwarf BoaTropidophis caymanensisCRother invertebrates?
Mona Rhinoceros IguanaCyclura stejnegeriCRother invertebrates?
Vanzo's WhiptailCnemidophorus vanzoiCRother invertebrates?
Santa Marta WrenTroglodytes monticolaCRbirds?
Gesneria brevifoliaCRplants?
Torrey PinePinus torreyanaCRplants?
Anegada SkinkSpondylurus anegadaeCRother invertebrates?
Greater Saint Croix SkinkSpondylurus magnacruzaeCRother invertebrates?
Drago de Gran CanariaDracaena tamaranaeCRplants?
Yerbamuda de JinámarLotus kunkeliiCRplants?
Pico de PalomaLotus maculatusCRplants?
Dendrophylax fawcettiiCRplants?
Montserrat OrchidEpidendrum montserratenseCRplants?
Cenchrus distichophyllusCRplants?
PicocernícaloLotus eremiticusCRplants?
Pico de FuegoLotus pyranthusCRplants?
Palo De JazminStyrax portoricensisCRplants?
Monito SkinkSpondylurus monitaeCRother invertebrates?
Earhart’s StopperEugenia earhartiiCRplants?
Cook's HollyIlex cookiiCRplants?
Woodbury's stopperEugenia woodburyanaCRplants?
Conus lugubrisCRmolluscs?
Bandy-legged burrow-dweller beetleLaemostenus terricolaCRinsects?
Lesser Saint Croix SkinkCapitellum parvicruzaeCRother invertebrates?
Barbados SkinkAlinea lanceolataCRother invertebrates?
hoja menudaPsidium sintenisiiCRplants?
Cuban KiteChondrohierax wilsoniiCRbirds?
Royal TernThalasseus maximusCRbirds?
Salviablanca de DoramasSideritis discolorCRplants?
Pohnpei ground Partula snailPartula guamensisCRmolluscs?
Aquadulcaris pheronyxCRcrustaceans?
Pohnpei tree snailPartula emersoniCRmolluscs?
Insulivitrina reticulataCRmolluscs?
Jamaican RacerHypsirhynchus aterCRother invertebrates?
Drepanolejeunea senticosaCRplants?
Hispaniolan Two-lined SkinkMabuya hispaniolaeCRother invertebrates?
Lesser Virgin Islands SkinkSpondylurus semitaeniatusCRother invertebrates?
Cochons SkinkMabuya cochonaeCRother invertebrates?
Creagrutus nigrostigmatusENother invertebrates?
Martin Garcia ThreadsnakeMitophis asbolepisCRother invertebrates?
Jamesonia hirtaCRplants?
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Biodiversity Brief — Cabinda

Outlook: Deteriorating

Caldas department in Colombia's Coffee Triangle represents a critical biodiversity hotspot within the Chocó-Magdalena and Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena regions. The department's location along the Central Cordillera creates diverse altitudinal gradients supporting cloud forests, montane ecosystems, and remnant dry forests in the Cauca River valley. According to IUCN Red List 2025 data, all 77 assessed species in Caldas are threatened, with every single species classified as Critically Endangered—an unprecedented conservation crisis. This includes 100% threat rates across all taxonomic groups: mammals (6/6), birds (5/5), amphibians (12/12), insects (14/14), other invertebrates (38/38), and molluscs (2/2). The department's coffee cultivation landscape, while economically vital, has fragmented natural habitats extensively. Deforestation for agriculture, urban expansion around Manizales, and climate change impacts on high-altitude ecosystems pose immediate threats. Mining activities in certain municipalities further pressure remaining natural areas. The Nevados National Natural Park protects some high-altitude páramo and cloud forest, but connectivity between protected areas remains limited. Caldas' position as a biological corridor between the Magdalena and Cauca valleys makes its conservation critical for regional species movement and genetic exchange throughout Colombia's Andean ecosystems.

Key Biomes & Ecosystems

Cloud Forest
Montane Forest
Páramo
Coffee Agroecosystems
Dry Forest
Andean Corridors

Conservation Achievements

Caldas has established several important conservation initiatives despite the critical threat status of its species. The department participates in Colombia's National System of Protected Areas through Los Nevados National Natural Park, which protects high-altitude páramo and cloud forest ecosystems essential for water regulation and endemic species. Regional environmental corporation CORPOCALDAS has implemented watershed management programs and biological corridor projects connecting forest fragments across the coffee landscape. The University of Caldas maintains active research programs documenting regional biodiversity and supporting conservation planning. Additionally, some coffee cooperatives have adopted shade-grown practices and forest conservation measures, creating wildlife-friendly agricultural matrices that provide habitat connectivity between protected areas.

Source: IUCN Red List 2025-2, GBIF, national survey data