Family: Fringillidae (Finches)
Authority: Rothschild, 1893
Red List Category
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here for more information about the Red List categories and criteria
Justification of Red List categoryFollowing methods developed in a series of papers published in 2017 (Akcakaya
et al. 2017, Keith
et al. 2017, Thompson
et al. 2017), the probability that the species is extinct based on records and surveys is 0.94, and the probability it is extinct based on threats is 0.91. Accordingly, it is classified as Extinct. Endemic to Maui,
H. affinis was confined to the upper slopes of Haleakala. The last specimens were taken in 1896 by Perkins (in Banko 1984). Although Pratt and Pyle (2000) express some scepticism of the 20th century records, the USFWS (2023) consider the last genuine record to be in 1996 (Reynolds and Snetsinger 2001). Recent searches and extensive surveys for other species on Maui, have failed to locate it. It was driven to extinction by habitat loss and degradation, introduced rats, cats, pigs and other non-natives, and in particular as a result of avian malaria and avian pox viruses from introduced mosquitoes.
Population size:
0 mature individuals
Population trend:
Country endemic:
no