Extinct and Endangered Birds
Extinct and Endangered Birds
Extinct and Endangered Birds
Flocks were so dense that the birds could simply be batted out of the air
with clubs as they flew over ridges; one shotgun blast could bring down
as many as 50 birds. A description from 1854: “There would be days and
days when the air was alive with them, hardly a break occurring in the
flocks for half a day at a time. Flocks stretched as far as a person could
see, one tier above another.” The naturalist John James Audubon
observed one flock for three days and estimated the birds were flying
past at a rate of 300 million per hour.
Professional hunters tracked the nomadic flocks and met the demand for
meat and feathers by suffocating birds nesting in trees with sulfurous
fires, knocking nests and squabs (young pigeons) from trees, baiting and
intoxicating them with alcohol-soaked grain to make them easier to
catch and by using live decoys with their eyes sewn shut. By 1880,
overkill had made commercial hunting unprofitable. In April 1896,
hunters found the last remnant flock of 250,000 and in one day killed all
but 5000 birds–other accounts say all were killed.
Thought extinct for more than 60 years, the Ivory-billed Woodpecker has
become the species most people associate with species extinction in the
Americas. Then in February 2004, a large woodpecker was seen by two
kayakers in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge in Arkansas and
based on the evidence, including a two-second video clip, many believe
C. principalis still exists. The sighting has stirred enough excitement to
launch searches for this “Lazarus species” in Arkansas, Florida and Texas,
coordinated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology and state wildlife agencies. There is even a $50,000 reward
for positive photographic evidence, offered by an anonymous donor.
Ivory-bill habitat (swampy bottomland hardwood forest) is rough terrain
for searchers. So far no indisputable evidence has emerged to confirm its
existence. Many experts think the 2004 sighting was of a Pileated
Woodpecker, a bird of very similar appearance and size.
The huge appetite for lumber to rebuild after the Civil War led to the
destruction of Ivory-bill habitat and its primary food source, beetle
larvae. Demand from collectors, including museum ornithologists,
increased as it became more rare, speeding its elimination. The Ivory-bill
was last seen in 1944. Once vast forests are today fragmented into much
smaller pockets of forest, virtual islands, surrounded by agricultural lands
and civilization. The possibility that one of the largest and most majestic
of woodpecker species still survives is inspirational to some but as with
many species whose habitat has been all but destroyed by human activity,
its population is unlikely to recover to any viable level, if it still exists at
all.
In 1941, hunting and habitat loss had brought the Whooping Crane
population down to just 15 individuals–a last remaining flock in Wood
Buffalo National Park in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Intensive
efforts to bring the tallest of North American birds back from extinction
have resulted in a rare and unusual success story.
In the 1980’s and 1990’s a joint U.S. and Canadian team worked to rear
non-migratory captive cranes and in 1993 released 33 birds in central
Florida. This population is doing well and increasing.
The latest effort to establish a migratory flock was started in 1999 by the
Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership (WCEP), another joint U.S. and
Canadian group. Chicks are raised at Necedah National Wildlife Refuge in
Wisconsin. Ultra-light aircraft engine noise is piped in to the nest from
egg stage so the birds will be conditioned to follow the aircraft along the
migration route of 1200 miles to Chassahowitzka and St. Mark’s NWR on
the gulf coast of Florida. Chicks in the nest are reared by costumed
handlers working in silence to ensure that chicks do not imprint on
humans.
Current population totals are nearly 400 in the wild and 150 in captivity.
Yet these numbers are still small enough to be vulnerable to a
catastrophic weather event that could devastate a flock during migration
or to disease.
Cinnamon Screech-Owl (Megascops petersoni)
The Peregrine Falcon is the fastest animal, diving at speeds of over 200
miles per hour. Its adaptability and vast breeding range make it the most
widespread raptor in the world. However, it was brought nearly to
extinction in the mid-1960’s, primarily by exposure to DDT and other
pesticides; the species became extinct in the eastern United States.
In use as a pesticide since 1939, DDT is stored in fatty tissues and is not
metabolized easily. DDT caused thinning of peregrine eggshells and a
resulting crash in hatch rates. Reintroduction programs became very
successful after DDT was banned in 1972 and the peregrine was removed
from the U.S. Endangered Species List in 1999. As a cliff dweller, the
Peregrine has been very successfully reintroduced into cities, where it
nests on building ledges and other structures and hunts pigeons and
other birds.
Eggshells of Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus), collected in 1899
The Peregrine Falcon is the fastest animal, diving at speeds of over 200
miles per hour. Its adaptability and vast breeding range make it the most
widespread raptor in the world. However, it was brought nearly to
extinction in the mid-1960’s, primarily by exposure to DDT and other
pesticides; the species became extinct in the eastern United States.
In use as a pesticide since 1939, DDT is stored in fatty tissues and is not
metabolized easily. DDT caused thinning of eggshells and a resulting
crash in hatch rates. Reintroduction programs became very successful as
DDT was banned in 1972 and the peregrine was removed from the U.S.
Endangered Species List in 1999. As a cliff dweller, the Peregrine has
been very successfully reintroduced into cities, where it nests on building
ledges and other structures and hunts pigeons and other birds.
First described in 2006 by Bird Division staff of the Field Museum Natural
History in Chicago (J. Tello, J. Degner, J. M. Bates, and D. E. Willard), the
Camiguin Hanging-Parrot, or Colasisi, occurs only in a specific area of
montane rain forest on Camiguin Island, a small island close to the
northern coast of central Mindanao in the Philippines. At the same time,
two news species of rodent from Camiguin were described by Field
Museum Curator of Mammals, Larry Heaney. Of the 7000 Philippine
islands, Camiguin is the smallest that supports an endemic bird or
mammal species. Camiguin was once entirely forested but as the
Philippines has become one of the most heavily deforested countries in
the world, less than 18% of the original rain forest remains. Logging and
deforestation for agriculture have effectively created islands of montane
rain forest within this small island, further restricting the habitat of this
parrot species, found only in a small area of forest in the eastern half of
the island. The discovery of L. camiguinensis and other endemic species
has fostered efforts to protect the remaining forest and declare it a
national park.
The Hyacinth Macaw is one of nearly 1500 bird species protected by the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna
and Flora (CITES), an agreement between 173 governments. It is the
largest parrot, measuring up to one meter long. The species is
endangered and its population in steady decline primarily due to the pet
trade. The price of a captive bird is $9,000 to $12,000 US. It is thought
that 10,000 birds were illegally collected in the 1980’s. Less than 7,000
still exist in the wild. Three other related species of macaw are extinct or
believed to be extinct.
The Carolina Parakeet was the only indigenous parrot in North America.
As its forest habitat was cleared in the 1800’s and crops planted in its
range in the eastern United States, the Carolina Parakeet began to feed
on cultivated fruit in addition to its staple diet of fruits and seeds of trees
and plants, especially cocklebur. Farmers exterminated the birds as
agricultural pests in fields and orchards. Their task was made easier by
the highly social parakeet’s flock behaviour of returning to where birds
had been killed or injured.
By the mid-1800’s the species was rare. The remaining population was
restricted to Florida; the last sightings were made in the early 1900’s.
Ironically, by then the remnant flocks in Florida were tolerated by farmers
and hunting for their colourful decorative feathers had stopped. It is
thought that disease and competition from honeybees for tree nesting
cavities were the final causes of extinction. The last Carolina Parakeets
died in 1918 in Cincinnati Zoo, in the same aviary where the last
Passenger Pigeon had died four years earlier.
Eskimo Curlew (Numenius borealis)
Once one of the most numerous of shorebirds, it has been over 40 years
since the last confirmed sighting of N. borealis. Like the Passenger
Pigeon, huge flocks once filled the skies along the migration route from
northern Alaska and the Northwest Territories to South America via the
prairies of Canada and the United States. Extensive market hunting in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries and the loss of prairies to agriculture
made the N. borealis population unviable. By the time of the Migratory
Bird Treaty Act of 1918, it was too late for the curlew population to
recover.
The Rusty Blackbird breeds in boreal forest wetlands across Canada and
Alaska and winters in similar habitat in the eastern half of the United
States. Habitat loss through conversion of wetlands to agriculture is the
most likely cause of the decline. In fact, bird species linked to wetlands
have faced the worst long-term declines of any North American birds.
Wetlands are particularly sensitive to the increased temperatures of
global warming, causing water loss, changes in chemical balance and
changes in the makeup of plant and animal communities. The demise of
E. carolinus may be a strong indication of the threats to the wetland
ecosystem.
Dusky Seaside Sparrow (Ammodramus maritimus nigrescens) (top)
Cape Sable Seaside Sparrow (Ammodramus maritimus mirabilis)
In 1992, the first condors were released in the wild and the first wild
condor chick hatched in 2002. Condors have been re-introduced in
various locations in Arizona, California and Baja California, Mexico. There
are now over 300 condors and approximately half of them live in the
wild.