No results: No bird species meet the exact criteria for a “Birds of Haiti: The Complete List.”
Note why the criteria create this result. The strict list you asked for treats Haiti as a political unit and demands species that occur only inside Haiti and meet full documentation standards. Bird records for the island of Hispaniola total about 280 species, but almost all island endemics occur across Hispaniola as a whole, not only inside Haiti’s borders. That makes a zero result when the rule requires species strictly confined to Haiti alone.
Understand the technical and historical reasons. Birds evolve and are recorded by geography, not by human borders. Many special species are “Hispaniolan endemics” and live in both Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Past habitat loss and limited surveys in some Haitian mountains also make exclusive, well-documented Haitian records rare. Near matches include well-known Hispaniolan endemics such as the Hispaniolan Trogon, Hispaniolan Woodpecker, and Hispaniolan Parrot — these are island endemics, not species restricted only to Haiti.
Consider related lists and useful alternatives. Compile a Hispaniola bird checklist (~280 species), a list of Hispaniolan endemics and threatened species, or regional guides for hotspots like Massif de la Hotte, Massif de la Selle, and Pic Macaya. Use authoritative sources (eBird, BirdLife, IUCN, local checklists) and produce sortable tables, species notes for endemics/threatened birds, seasonal flags, photos, and a downloadable checklist instead. Explore those options rather than a strictly “Haiti-only” species list.

