The Orange-breasted Falcon Falco deiroleucus, among the world's most poorly
known falcons, is sparsely distributed in Neotropical forests from south-e
ast Mexico or Guatemala to Paraguay and northern Argentina. Details of dist
ribution and population size are poorly known throughout the species's rang
e. From 1992 to 1997 we studied this species at 19 nest sites in Guatemala
and Belize. Occupancy and productivity rates remained stable for this north
ernmost population over this six-year period. Sparse data on historical dis
tribution preclude a full assessment of possible changes in population stat
us in the Mesoamerican portion of the species's range. Today the species ap
pears restricted to forested areas in conjunction with large nesting cliffs
. No breeding record is known for any Mesoamerican nation except Belize and
Guatemala. Mean number of fledglings per successful nesting was significan
tly higher in areas of predominantly forested mosaic habitat (2.11, n = 18)
than at sites with uninterrupted mature forest (1.36, n = 11); proportion
of sites occupied and of pairs fledging young did not differ between these
two habitats. Based on historical and current distribution records and dist
ribution of potential nesting habitat, we conclude that the Guatemala/Beliz
e population of Orange-breasted Falcons is disjunct from the species's main
range in South America, is perhaps the only local population (at best one
of a small number) in Mesoamerica, and is tightly linked to the existence o
f suitable nesting cliffs combined with large forested areas.