Four Rare Guam Kingfisher Chicks Hatch at Virginia Facility, Making an 'Incredibly Valuable' Addition to the Small Population of Extinct-in-the-Wild Birds
Four Guam kingfisher chicks, also known as sihek, have hatched at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia, marking a significant boost to their critically low population. The hatchlings come from first-time parents, and their successful breeding is crucial for enhancing genetic diversity within the species. With only about 125 sihek remaining globally, every new chick is considered incredibly valuable for conservation efforts.
- ▪Four sihek chicks hatched at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Virginia this spring.
- ▪The species was wiped out from its native Guam due to the invasive brown tree snake.
- ▪Only about 125 sihek are currently living worldwide, making each new hatchling important for conservation.
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Four Rare Guam Kingfisher Chicks Hatch at Virginia Facility, Making an ‘Incredibly Valuable’ Addition to the Small Population of Extinct-in-the-Wild Birds The species, also known as the sihek, was wiped out from its native Guam and kept alive in captivity. Conservationists released some birds on Palmyra Atoll in 2024, and they have been thriving so far Carlyn Kranking | Associate Web Editor, Science May 29, 2026 5:00 p.m. ShareCopy linkEmailSMSFacebookXRedditLinkedInBlueskyPrintAdd as preferred source A sihek, or Guam kingfisher, chick born at the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute Roshan Patel, Smithsonian Extinct from their native habitat in the wild, the Guam kingfisher, or sihek, is an extremely rare bird. But this spring, its numbers got an important boost.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Smithsonian Magazine.