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a relic species of flightless wrens—the only example of aflightless perching bird ever found anywhere。 he set off at once for the island; but by the timehe got there the cat had killed them all。 twelve stuffed museum species of the stephens islandflightless wren are all that now exist。
at least we have those。 all too often; it turns out; we are not much better at looking afterspecies after they have gone than we were before they went。 take the case of the lovelycarolina parakeet。 emerald green; with a golden head; it was arguably the most striking andbeautiful bird ever to live in north america—parrots don’t usually venture so far north; asyou may have noticed—and at its peak it existed in vast numbers; exceeded only by thepassenger pigeon。 but the carolina parakeet was also considered a pest by farmers and easilyhunted because it flocked tightly and had a peculiar habit of flying up at the sound of gunfire(as you would expect); but then returning almost at once to check on fallen rades。
in his classic american omithology; written in the early nineteenth century; charleswillson peale describes an occasion in which he repeatedly empties a shotgun into a tree inwhich they roost:
at each successive discharge; though showers of them fell; yet the affection of thesurvivors seemed rather to increase; for; after a few circuits around the place; they againalighted near me; looking down on their slaughtered panions with such manifestsymptoms of sympathy and concern; as entirely disarmed me。
by the second decade of the twentieth century; the birds had been so relentlessly huntedthat only a few remained alive in captivity。 the last one; named inca; died in the cincinnatizoo in 1918 (not quite four years after the last passenger pigeon died in the same zoo) andwas reverently stuffed。 and where would you go to see poor inca now? nobody knows。 thezoo lost it。
what is both most intriguing and puzzling about the story above is that peale was a lover ofbirds; and yet did not hesitate to kill them in large numbers for no better reason than that itinterested him to do so。 it is a truly astounding fact that for the longest time the people whowere most intensely interested in the world’s living things were the ones most likely toextinguish them。
no one represented this position on a larger scale (in every sense) than lionel walterrothschild; the second baron rothschild。 scion of the great banking family; rothschild was astrange and reclusive fellow。 he lived his entire life in the nursery wing of his home at tring;in buckinghamshire; using the furniture of his childhood—even sleeping in his childhoodbed; though eventually he weighed three hundred pounds。
his passion was natural history and he became a devoted accumulator of objects。 he senthordes of trained men—as many as four hundred at a time—to every quarter of the globe toclamber over mountains and hack their way through jungles in the pursuit of newspecimens—particularly things that flew。 these were crated or boxed up and sent back torothschild’s estate at tring; where he and a battalion of assistants exhaustively logged andanalyzed everything that came before them; producing a constant stream of books; papers; andmonographs—some twelve hundred in all。 altogether; rothschild’s natural history factoryprocessed well over two million specimens and added five thousand species of creature to thescientific archive。
remarkably; rothschild’s collecting efforts were neither the most extensive nor the mostgenerously funded of the nineteenth century。 that title almost certainly belongs to a slightlyearlier but also very wealthy british collector named hugh cuming; who became sopreoccupied with accumulating objects that he built a large oceangoing ship and employed acrew to sail the world full…time; picking up whatever they could find—birds; plants; animalsof all types; and especially shells。 it was his unrivaled collection of barnacles that passed todarwin and served as the basis for his seminal study。
however; rothschild was easily the most scientific collector of his age; though also themost regrettably lethal; for in the 1890s he became interested in hawaii; perhaps the mosttemptingly vulnerable environment earth has yet produced。 millions of years of isolation hadallowed hawaii to evolve 8;800 unique species of animals and plants。 of particular interest torothschild were the islands’ colorful and distinctive birds; often consisting of very smallpopulations inhabiting extremely specific ranges。
the tragedy for many hawaiian birds was that they were not only distinctive; desirable; andrare—a dangerous bination in the best of circumstances—but also often heartbreakinglyeasy to take。 the greater koa finch; an innocuous member of the honeycreeper family; lurkedshyly in the canopies of koa trees; but if someone imitated its song it would abandon its coverat once and fly down in a show of wele。 the last of the species vanished in 1896; killedby rothschild’s ace collector harry palmer; five years after the disappearance of its cousin thelesser koa finch; a bird so sublimely rare that only one has ever been seen: the one shot forrothschild’s collection。 altogether during the decade or so of rothschild’s most intensivecollecting; at least nine species of hawaiian birds vanished; but it may have been more。
rothschild was by no means alone in his zeal to capture birds at more or less any cost。
others in fact were more ruthless。 in 1907 when a well…known collector named alansonbryan realized that he had shot the last three specimens of black mamos; a species of forestbird that had only been discovered the previous decade; he noted that the news filled him with“joy。”
it was; in short; a difficult age to fathom—a time when almost any animal was persecuted ifit was deemed the least bit intrusive。 in 1890; new york state paid out over one hundredbounties for eastern mountain lions even though it was clear that the much…harassed creatureswere on the brink of extinction。 right up until the 1940s many states continued to paybounties for almost any kind of predatory creature。 west virginia gave out an annual collegescholarship to whoever brought in the most dead pests—and “pests” was liberally interpretedto mean almost anything that wasn’t grown on farms or kept as pets。
perhaps nothing speaks more vividly for the strangeness of the times than the fate of thelovely little bachman’s warbler。 a native of the southern united states; the warbler wasfamous for its unusually thrilling song; but its population numbers; never robust; graduallydwindled until by the 1930s the warbler vanished altogether and went unseen for many years。
then in 1939; by happy coincidence two separate birding enthusiasts; in widely separatedlocations; came across lone survivors just two days apart。 they both shot the birds; and thatwas the last that was ever seen of bachman’s warblers。
the impulse to exterminate was by no means exclusively american。 in australia; bountieswere paid on the tasmanian tiger (properly the thylacine); a doglike creature with distinctive“tiger” stripes across its back; until shortly before the last one died; forlorn and nameless; in aprivate hobart