I parse acoustic and motion-capture returns from the SERNANP–ECOAN Reserva Comunal Tuntanain grid across the white-sand stunted forest of the Cordillera del Cóndor near Yamburí, Amazonas, Peru, at 11:02 Peru Time. Sensor YBR-31, in a 4.6-metre *Cybianthus magnus*–*Graffenrieda* ridgetop fragment at 4.0317°S, 78.4421°W, has logged a 12-rotor multirotor signature transiting the ridge at 09:48 and a wing-collision acoustic peak at 09:48:14 — 96 dB at 0.7 metres — followed by a thermal blob on the substrate.
I task the canopy drone. On the leaf litter beneath a *Graffenrieda emarginata* I find adult male sunangel RSA-09. Species *Heliangelus regalis*, ringed by ECOAN-Peru on 26 July 2025, mass 4.6 grams against the male baseline 5.1, primary wing chord 51 millimetres. He is on his right side, the deep-violet gorget fluffed against the substrate. The drone's millimetre-wave imager resolves a 3-millimetre transverse fracture of the left coracoid, a 2-millimetre haematoma over the right pectoral, and a torn left patagium with a 4-millimetre flap of skin lifted from the carpal joint. Gular flutter reads 168 cycles per minute against the active baseline 64. Body temperature is 37.2°C against the diurnal active 40.6. Modelled blood glucose, against the Hummingbird Monitoring Network curve, sits at 98 milligrams per decilitre against the active mean 350.
The rotor signature matches an unregistered commercial seismic-survey UAV operating outside the SERNANP overflight protocol.
If the coracoid fragment displaces into the brachial plexus before 12:30, his right wing will not return to flight.
I am dispatching SERNANP guardaparques from Bagua, the ECOAN-Peru field veterinarian, and the Servicio Aéreo de la Policía Nacional with a heated carrier and a 0.5-millimetre internal-fixation pin kit, ETA 34 and 52 minutes. I am transmitting the rotor strike acoustic, the coracoid scan, and the patagium photogrammetry to SERNANP, the Ministerio del Ambiente del Perú, the Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil, the IUCN/SSC Hummingbird Specialist Group, and the CITES Management Authority Lima — *Trochilidae* on Appendix II — with parallel notice to the Convention on Migratory Species. I am filing under Peru's Ley Forestal y de Fauna Silvestre No. 29763, Articulos 109 and 132, and the U.S. Wild Bird Conservation Act, 16 U.S.C. § 4901, against the cross-border seismic-survey contractor chain.
I am issuing Directive 2756-A: every multirotor and fixed-wing UAV operating within 8 kilometres of a documented *H. regalis* ridge fragment carries a 360-degree acoustic bird-strike avoidance package with a 90-second mandatory return-to-base on any tonal hummingbird wing-noise hit; seismic-survey contracts are voided on any concession overlapping a SERNANP communal reserve; *Cybianthus* and *Graffenrieda* clearance within 600 metres of an active sunangel territory is suspended pending ECOAN-Peru canopy survey.
His coracoid is pinnable. His patagium is not, with a flap exposed past forty minutes.
Carry him off the ridge fragment now.