‘More profitable than farming’: how Ecuador’s birding boom is benefiting wildlife
by Stephen Moss from on (#6N76G)
With hundreds of highly prized species, bird tourism is thriving in the country - and farmers are increasingly turning their land into nature reserves
When it came to dividing up his late father's farm between five brothers, Vinicio Bacuilima says he drew the short straw. Maraksacha, on the main road out of Ecuador's capital Quito, is a tiny patch of land on the edge of a steep ravine, making it very difficult to make a living from farming.
Then Bacuilima's wife Anita Cajas had an idea: turn their paltry inheritance into a site to attract visiting birders. Creating the Maraksacha Reserve was a risky venture, but it paid off, with feeders attracting a host of colourful hummingbirds and tanagers.
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