Scientists work to save wild Puerto Rican parrot after Maria

In this Nov. 6, 2018 photo, a Puerto Rican parrot perches on a branch inside a flight cage at the Iguaca Aviary in El Yunque, Puerto Rico, where the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service runs a parrot recovery program in collaboration with the Forest Service and the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. Federal and local scientists will meet next month to debate how best to revive a species that numbered more than 1 million in the 1800s but dwindled to 13 birds during the 1970s after decades of forest clearing. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

In this Nov. 6, 2018 photo, animal science intern Viviana Berdecia, left, watches forest biologist Jessica Ilse record data near the Iguaca Aviary at El Yunque, Puerto Rico, where the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service runs a parrot recovery program in collaboration with the Forest Service and the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. Ilse said that many of the large trees where parrots used to nest are now gone and noted that it took 14 months for El Yunque’s canopy to close after Hurricane Hugo hit Puerto Rico in 1989 as a Category 3 storm. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

This Nov. 6, 2018 photo shows part of a forest canopy near the Iguaca Aviary, in El Yunque, Puerto Rico. Federal and local scientists will meet next month to debate how best to revive a species of Puerto Rican parrots that numbered more than 1 million in the 1800s but dwindled to 13 birds during the 1970s after decades of forest clearing. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

In this Nov. 6, 2018 photo, Puerto Rican parrots huddle in a flight cage at the Iguaca Aviary in El Yunque, Puerto Rico, where the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service runs a parrot recovery program in collaboration with the Forest Service and the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. Biologists are trying to save the last of the endangered Puerto Rican parrots after more than half the population of birds disappeared when Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico and destroyed their habitat and food sources. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti)

EL YUNQUE, Puerto Rico — Biologists are trying to save the last of the endangered Puerto Rican parrots after more than half the population of the bright green birds with turquoise-tipped wings disappeared when Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico and destroyed their habitat and food sources.

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