CURACA, Brazil — All Spix's macaws are majestically blue in the blazing sun of Brazil's Northeast, but each bird is distinct to Candice and Cromwell Purchase. As the parrots soar squawking past their home, the couple can readily identify bird No. 17 by its smooth feathers and can tell No. 16 from No. 22, which has two beads attached to its radio collar.
This familiarity offers a glimpse of the South African couple's commitment to saving one of the world's most critically endangered species. The parrot — endemic to a small fraction of the Sao Francisco River basin and already rare in the 19th century — was declared extinct in the wild in 2000, when a lonely surviving male disappeared following decades of poaching and habitat destruction from livestock overgrazing. The few remaining birds were scattered in private collections around the world.
For the Spix's macaws, immortalized in the popular animated ''Rio'' films, the road back from the edge of extinction has been a long, winding and bumpy one.
Threats that had devastated the Spix's macaws still loom, and the birds now face another menace: climate change. The species' original territory overlaps what has recently been officially designated Brazil's first arid climate region.
The drier conditions worry Cromwell Purchase because of their potential impact on habitat for the few surviving Spix's macaws.
''A dry area only gets rain for a very short period of the year. A drought in that period might go an entire year before you're going to get your next rain,'' said Purchase, a tall and slim 46-year-old. ''The animals are adapted to harsh environments, but they are on the edge. Any small increment of change will decimate populations.''
In November, two federal research institutes released a study of rainfall water loss in plants and soil between 1960 and 2020. It showed that northern Bahia state, including Curaca, where the Spix's macaws are trying to survive, is now consistent with a desert area. It also identified the expansion of semi-arid climate in the Northeast, where nearly 55 million people live.
''If the planet is warmer, there will be much greater evaporation. So, the water leaves the environment and generates aridity,'' the director of Brazil's anti-desertification efforts, Alexandre Pires, told The Associated Press.