A total of 66 bird species in Northeast are threatened with extinction, said a report.

The report, State of India’s Birds 2020, stated that altogether 66 bird species in the region are stated to be in the “high-conservation concern” category.

The report was released at the 13th Conference of Parties of the Convention on the conservation of migratory species of wild animals in New Delhi on Monday.

Of the 66 birds, 23 are in Arunachal Pradesh, 22 in Assam, seven in Manipur, three in Meghalaya, four in Mizoram, five in Nagaland and two in Tripura.

The report is the culmination of a collaboration between 10 research and conservation organisations, spanning both government and non-government institutions.

“With their ubiquity and ecological importance, birds are excellent indicators of the state of our natural world and are potent cultural symbols of nature. This national-level assessment of birds is a significant step forward in the monitoring and conservation of India’s rich and varied biodiversity,” the report said.

Bar-winged wren babbler, bugun liocichla and Mishmi wren babbler are some of the species in Arunachal, which have been identified as having conservation concerns while the chestnut-backed laughing thrush, white-winged wood duck and Bengal florican in Assam are some species of conservation concern.

The report further revealed that little is known about the swamp grass babbler, which is restricted to grasslands in the Brahmaputra floodplains.

The chestnut-backed laughing thrush, endemic to the Indo-Myanmar lowland forests, is only known within India from the Dehing Patkai forests in eastern Assam.

“Conservation of these last remaining lowland rainforests in the Northeast is key to the survival of this species,” it said.

The Naga wren babbler is one of many range-restricted wren babblers found here.

The Indian olive bulbul is found only in the forests adjoining Bangladesh in Tripura, southern Assam, western Mizoram and Manipur, and southern Meghalaya.