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Sponsor the Yellow-crowned amazon

A foundation that shouldn't have to exist

Giving freedom back isn't opening a cage. It's teaching a whole flock to fly, to find food in the wild, to recognize a predator and to trust their own — until they can return as one and stay.

It's slow, hard, expensive work. It shouldn't have to exist. But it does — and it began with a single parrot.

Our story

How it all began

In 2019, in a Cartagena apartment, a green-and-yellow chick arrived in a cardboard box. They raised it by hand —a syringe, a spoon, the internet as the only vet— not yet knowing that this small green body would start something. They named him Beethoven. He was the very first.

Alejandro Rigatuso with baby Beethoven in a cardboard box, Cartagena 2019The day he arrived
Hand-rearing him

Alejandro Rigatuso and Beethoven · Cartagena, 2019 — Fundación Loros' first parrot.

Read the full story →

From one parrot to a reserve

In 2022, the environmental authority granted Alejandro a permit to rehabilitate parrots. A few arrived at first; soon, dozens. And behind them, thousands more — the ones seized in Colombia every year.

The foundation grew with them. It bought land so rehabilitated parrots could fly free again, and biologists and scientists —from Colombia and abroad— joined the work. What began in an apartment is now a reserve.

But the problem is vast, and that is why we need you.

What one parrot made possible

Years later, what once fit in a cardboard box is a reserve of over 500 hectares: hundreds of rescued birds and a whole community —volunteers, biologists, farmers, schools, scientists and environmental authorities— working to give a second chance to those who never should have lost their freedom.

The method you fund isn't just our experience: it's published, peer-reviewed science.

Cambridge University Press emblemPublished in · Peer-reviewedBird Conservation InternationalCambridge University Press · 2026 · Open access

About the Yellow-crowned amazon

Our flagship species. A large green parrot with yellow forehead and crown. The most-trafficked parrot in Colombia, and the reason Fundación Loros was founded. Its release was the subject of our peer-reviewed paper in Bird Conservation International.

Its journey back to the wild

Every individual follows the same open method: rescue and health evaluation, then free-flight training through increasingly complex environments (pre-release), and finally release with months of feeder-based post-release monitoring back in the tropical dry forest. Read the peer-reviewed study of its release. Your sponsorship keeps that whole process running.

What you sponsor is a process — not a pet. When you sponsor a species you fund its rehabilitation and release process — food, veterinary care, free-flight training, post-release monitoring and the community work that keeps released birds safe.

As a sponsor you receive photos and videos of the process, updates from our rangers and veterinarian, a monthly report, team testimonials, and recognition in our sponsors list and on social media.

Ready to give them back the sky?

$20/month funds this species’ rehabilitation process. Monthly sponsorship via PayPal opens soon — meanwhile you can support this work today.