Rain, rats and fire ants threaten the survival of the rare Tahiti monarch, despite a record best year for its conservation.
Just 10 breeding pairs remain in the wild population, which numbers fewer than 50 mature birds in total.
Efforts to save the birds won an award from conservation partnership BirdLife International.
But experts warn that poor weather and predators could dramatically affect the current breeding season.
The Tahiti monarch (Pomarea nigra) is a species of monarch flycatcher that lives in four forested valleys on the island of Tahiti in French Polynesia.
Adults are black with pale blue beaks and juveniles are a red-brown colour.
Populations of the songbirds have declined throughout the 20th Century, but a local conservation programme that has been running for the past 16 years has succeeded in boosting breeding figures.
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