Estuario de Virrilá

Location

Piura, Peru

Category

Regional

Basis for Designation

More than 20,000 shorebirds annually, and more than 1% of the biogeographic populations of Charadrius nivosus occidentalisNumenius phaeopus (Pacific Coast population) and Calidris alba.

Size

14,007 hectares (34,612 acres)​

Date Designated

November 2017

Site Owner

Municipio Provincial de Sechura

Site Partners

Local community of San Martín de Sechura
El Comité de Gestión del ACA

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Overview

The Área de Conservación Ambiental Estuario de Virrilá lies at what used to be the mouth of the Piura River. However, at present the river does not reach the sea, and thus the estuary is dependent on tidal waters from Sechura Bay, an area of exceptional biological richness located in the transition zone between the Peruvian Current (cold waters) and the Equatorial Current (warm waters). The estuary is characterized by extensive beaches of sand and mud, shallow water, salt pans with halophytic vegetation, and coastal desert and Algarrobo (Prosopis pallida) scrub-forest in the near surroundings.

The site regularly holds over 20,000 shorebirds, and is home to over 1% of the biogeographic populations of Snowy Plover Charadrius nivosus (subspecies occidentalis), Whimbrel Numenius phaeopus (Pacific coast population) and Sanderling Calidris alba. Of particular note is the importance of the site for Snowy Plover, a globally Near Threatened species, with the occidentalissubspecies restricted to the Pacific coast from southern Ecuador to central Chile.

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Estuario de Virrilá. Photo: Frank Suárez.

The WHSRN site covers a total of 14,000 ha, and since 13 November 2015 has been recognized as an Área de Conservación Ambiental (ACA – Environmental Conservation Area) by the Provincial Municipality of Sechura. The Municipality is responsible for the administration and management of the ACA and co-manages it with the San Martín de Sechura Local Community, which has an ancestral right to the land. Both the Provincial Municipality and the ACA Management Committee, as well as the San Martín de Sechura Local Community have expressed their commitment and support for the conservation of shorebirds and their habitats in the area.

In addition to its importance for shorebirds, the Estuario de Virrilá has been recognized as an Important Bird and Biodiversity Area primarily due to the large numbers of waterbirds it supports, including counts of over 50,000 Franklin’s Gull (Leucophaeus pipixcan). It also supports populations of two globally threatened bird species, Peruvian Tern (Sternula lorata) and Rufous Flycatcher (Myiarchus semirufus), and is a feeding area for the threatened species of threatened Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas).

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Sanderlings at Estuario de Virrilá. Photo: Frank Suárez.

A significant potential threat to the Virrilá Estuary are various concessions for mining of non-metallic minerals that have also been established close to the estuary. Fortunately, the company with the concession which has the greatest overlap with the estuary, Cementos Pacasmayo S.A., has excluded the area from its scope of its operations, and expressed support for the conservation of the estuary, and forms part of the ACA Management Committee.

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Frank Suárez of Naturaleza y Cultura Internacional Perú receives the official designation from Rob Clay and Diego Luna Quevedo of WHSRN. Photo: Diego Luna Quevedo.