Ivorybills!

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Mayabird
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Ivorybills!

Post by Mayabird »

Glory be, the Lord God Bird lives!
Da Beeb wrote: 'Extinct' woodpecker found alive
The bird was declared extinct in 1920
The spectacular ivory-billed woodpecker, which was declared extinct in 1920, has been found alive in North America, Science magazine reports.

The news has stunned ornithologists worldwide, with some comparing the discovery to finding the dodo.

Researchers began an intense year-long search after a tip-off before finally capturing the bird on video.

The find has ignited hope that other "extinct" birds may be clinging on to survival in isolated places.

'Finding Elvis'

"This find is so significant that it is really difficult to describe," Alistair Gammell, of the UK's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), told BBC News. "We sadly won't rediscover the dodo, but it is almost on that level."

Frank Gill, of the US National Audubon Society, added: "This is huge, just huge. It is kind of like finding Elvis."

The "stunning" red, white and black woodpecker was formerly distributed across the south-eastern United States and Cuba.

The bird carves out a narrow niche for itself by drilling in mature trees, and logging and forest clearance for agriculture began to impinge on its environment.

By 1920, it was assumed extinct, although there was one more confirmed sighting in North America of a lonely unpaired female, above the remnants of an over-cut forest.

Since then, decades of searches yielded nothing and hope gradually faded away.

Now, finally, the bird has been seen again in the Big Woods of eastern Arkansas.

The discovery was first made on 11 February 2004, by Gene Sparling, of Hot Springs, Arkansas, who was kayaking in a reserve in Big Woods. He saw an unusually large red-crested woodpecker fly towards him and land on a nearby tree.

He said the creature did not look quite like anything he had seen before, so he contacted Cornell University's Living Bird magazine.

After a team of experts interviewed him, they felt they might be onto something special.

A second chance

John Fitzpatrick, of Cornell University, headed the search party, which included Tim Gallagher, editor of Living Bird.

Within a month, Dr Gallagher had seen the ivory-billed woodpecker for himself.

Describing the moment he first set eyes on it, he said: "Just to think this bird made it into the 21st Century gives me chills.

"It's like a funeral shroud has been pulled back, giving us a glimpse of a living bird, rising Lazarus-like from the grave."

The team finally went on to capture the bird on video, which allowed them to confirm its identity.

Among the world's largest woodpeckers, the ivory-bill is one of six North American bird species suspected or known to have gone extinct since 1880.

"This provides hope for [other] species classified as potentially extinct," said Stuart Butchart, of BirdLife International.

It also offers an extra incentive to protect the habitat of the ivory-bill, as well as other birds.

"Amazingly America may have another chance to protect the future of this spectacular bird and the awesome forests in which it lives," Mr Fitzpatrick said.

"It is the most beautiful bird we could imagine rediscovering. It is a magical bird.

"For those of us who tenaciously cling to the idea that man can live alongside fellow species, this is the most incredible ray of hope."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4493825.stm
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Post by Pick »

I heard this! It's fantastic news!
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Darth Raptor
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Post by Darth Raptor »

Although this is wonderful news, is there any real long-term hope for species with populations in the triple and double digits? Either our previous population estimates were off, or we had the fortune of witnessing the very last ivorybill; in 2004 no less.
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Post by Omega18 »

Darth Raptor wrote:Although this is wonderful news, is there any real long-term hope for species with populations in the triple and double digits? Either our previous population estimates were off, or we had the fortune of witnessing the very last ivorybill; in 2004 no less.
Actually if you read some of the articles on this issue, the habitat for these woodpeckers is actually bouncing back as there are now more areas designed as wilderness reserves and some of the forests in those areas are approaching old growth status. You can read about the measures being taken to preserve the area where the ivory bil was found here.
http://www.nature.org/wherewework/north ... t8313.html

While imbreeding may be a concern over the longterm, this may be only one of the locations this woodpecker species is at given there have been at least somewhat creditable sightings in other areas, most noticibly in southeast Lousiana. Given these birds can fly rather quickly over a large area, its quite likely that birds from these different areas sometimes interact and breed with each other.
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Maraxus
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Post by Maraxus »

Worse comes to worse, we could always breed them in captivity. We've done that to the Black footed ferret, and their numbers have gone up from 20 to 300.
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The Guid
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Post by The Guid »

G'nabbit I paid that assassin good money to get every last one!!!!

Darn you Industrialisation!!!!! :evil:
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Post by Master of Ossus »

Maraxus wrote:Worse comes to worse, we could always breed them in captivity. We've done that to the Black footed ferret, and their numbers have gone up from 20 to 300.
At the very least, we can try to recover and preserve their DNA so that there could be SOME hope of the species being resurrected in the distant future, if only with a couple of individuals.
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Maraxus
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Post by Maraxus »

[sarcasm] But what about the sanctity of life? God chose these creatures to die. who are we to intervine in his great plan? [/sarcasm]
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