fbpx
Wikipedia

Passenger pigeon

The passenger pigeon or wild pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius) is an extinct species of pigeon that was endemic to North America. Its common name is derived from the French word passager, meaning "passing by", due to the migratory habits of the species. The scientific name also refers to its migratory characteristics. The morphologically similar mourning dove (Zenaida macroura) was long thought to be its closest relative, and the two were at times confused, but genetic analysis has shown that the genus Patagioenas is more closely related to it than the Zenaida doves.

Passenger pigeon
Temporal range: 5.33–0 Ma Zanclean-Holocene[1]
Live female in 1896/98, kept in the aviary of C. O. Whitman

Extinct (1914) (IUCN 3.1)[2]

Presumed Extinct (1914) (NatureServe)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Genus: Ectopistes
Swainson, 1827
Species:
E. migratorius
Binomial name
Ectopistes migratorius
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Distribution map, with former range in orange and breeding zone in red
Synonyms
  • Columba migratoria Linnaeus, 1766
  • Columba canadensis Linnaeus, 1766
  • Ectopistes migratoria Swainson, 1827

The passenger pigeon was sexually dimorphic in size and coloration. The male was 390 to 410 mm (15.4 to 16.1 in) in length, mainly gray on the upperparts, lighter on the underparts, with iridescent bronze feathers on the neck, and black spots on the wings. The female was 380 to 400 mm (15.0 to 15.7 in), and was duller and browner than the male overall. The juvenile was similar to the female, but without iridescence. It mainly inhabited the deciduous forests of eastern North America and was also recorded elsewhere, but bred primarily around the Great Lakes. The pigeon migrated in enormous flocks, constantly searching for food, shelter, and breeding grounds, and was once the most abundant bird in North America, numbering around 3 billion, and possibly up to 5 billion. A very fast flyer, the passenger pigeon could reach a speed of 100 km/h (62 mph). The bird fed mainly on mast, and also fruits and invertebrates. It practiced communal roosting and communal breeding, and its extreme gregariousness may be linked with searching for food and predator satiation.

Passenger pigeons were hunted by Native Americans, but hunting intensified after the arrival of Europeans, particularly in the 19th century. Pigeon meat was commercialized as cheap food, resulting in hunting on a massive scale for many decades. There were several other factors contributing to the decline and subsequent extinction of the species, including shrinking of the large breeding populations necessary for preservation of the species and widespread deforestation, which destroyed its habitat. A slow decline between about 1800 and 1870 was followed by a rapid decline between 1870 and 1890. In 1900, the last confirmed wild bird was shot in southern Ohio.[2][4] The last captive birds were divided in three groups around the turn of the 20th century, some of which were photographed alive. Martha, thought to be the last passenger pigeon, died on September 1, 1914, at the Cincinnati Zoo. The eradication of the species is a notable example of anthropogenic extinction.

Taxonomy edit

 
Earliest published illustration of the species (a male), Mark Catesby, 1731

Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus coined the binomial name Columba macroura for both the mourning dove and the passenger pigeon in the 1758 edition of his work Systema Naturae (the starting point of biological nomenclature), wherein he appears to have considered the two identical. This composite description cited accounts of these birds in two pre-Linnean books. One of these was Mark Catesby's description of the passenger pigeon, which was published in his 1731 to 1743 work Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands, which referred to this bird as Palumbus migratorius, and was accompanied by the earliest published illustration of the species. Catesby's description was combined with the 1743 description of the mourning dove by George Edwards, who used the name C. macroura for that bird. There is nothing to suggest Linnaeus ever saw specimens of these birds himself, and his description is thought to be fully derivative of these earlier accounts and their illustrations. In his 1766 edition of Systema Naturae, Linnaeus dropped the name C. macroura, and instead used the name C. migratoria for the passenger pigeon, and C. carolinensis for the mourning dove.[5][6][7] In the same edition, Linnaeus also named C. canadensis, based on Turtur canadensis, as used by Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760. Brisson's description was later shown to have been based on a female passenger pigeon.[8]

In 1827, William John Swainson moved the passenger pigeon from the genus Columba to the new monotypic genus Ectopistes, due in part to the length of the wings and the wedge shape of the tail.[9] In 1906 Outram Bangs suggested that because Linnaeus had wholly copied Catesby's text when coining C. macroura, this name should apply to the passenger pigeon, as E. macroura.[10] In 1918 Harry C. Oberholser suggested that C. canadensis should take precedence over C. migratoria (as E. canadensis), as it appeared on an earlier page in Linnaeus' book.[8] In 1952 Francis Hemming proposed that the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) secure the specific name macroura for the mourning dove, and the name migratorius for the passenger pigeon, since this was the intended use by the authors on whose work Linnaeus had based his description.[7] This was accepted by the ICZN, which used its plenary powers to designate the species for the respective names in 1955.[11]

Evolution edit

 
Mounted male passenger pigeon, Field Museum of Natural History
 
Band-tailed pigeon, a species in the related genus Patagioenas
 
The physically similar mourning dove is not closely related.

The passenger pigeon was a member of the pigeon and dove family, Columbidae. The oldest known fossil of the genus is an isolated humerus (USNM 430960) known from the Lee Creek Mine in North Carolina in sediments belonging to the Yorktown Formation, dating to the Zanclean stage of the Pliocene, between 5.3 and 3.6 million years ago.[12] Its closest living relatives were long thought to be the Zenaida doves, based on morphological grounds, particularly the physically similar mourning dove (now Z. macroura).[13][14] It was even suggested that the mourning dove belonged to the genus Ectopistes and was listed as E. carolinensis by some authors, including Thomas Mayo Brewer.[15] The passenger pigeon was supposedly descended from Zenaida pigeons that had adapted to the woodlands on the plains of central North America.[16]

The passenger pigeon differed from the species in the genus Zenaida in being larger, lacking a facial stripe, being sexually dimorphic, and having iridescent neck feathers and a smaller clutch. In a 2002 study by American geneticist Beth Shapiro et al., museum specimens of the passenger pigeon were included in an ancient DNA analysis for the first time (in a paper focusing mainly on the dodo), and it was found to be the sister taxon of the cuckoo-dove genus Macropygia. The Zenaida doves were instead shown to be related to the quail-doves of the genus Geotrygon and the Leptotila doves.[17][18][19]

A more extensive 2010 study instead showed that the passenger pigeon was most closely related to the New World Patagioenas pigeons, including the band-tailed pigeon (P. fasciata) of western North America, which are related to the Southeast Asian species in the genera Turacoena, Macropygia and Reinwardtoena. This clade is also related to the Columba and Streptopelia doves of the Old World (collectively termed the "typical pigeons and doves"). The authors of the study suggested that the ancestors of the passenger pigeon may have colonized the New World from South East Asia by flying across the Pacific Ocean, or perhaps across Beringia in the north.[19]

In a 2012 study, the nuclear DNA of the passenger pigeon was analyzed for the first time, and its relationship with the Patagioenas pigeon was confirmed. In contrast to the 2010 study, these authors suggested that their results could indicate that the ancestors of the passenger pigeon and its Old World relatives may have originated in the Neotropical region of the New World.[18]

The cladogram below follows the 2012 DNA study showing the position of the passenger pigeon among its closest relatives:[18]

Columba (Old World pigeons)

Streptopelia (turtle doves and collared doves)

Patagioenas (New World pigeons)

Ectopistes (passenger pigeon)

DNA in old museum specimens is often degraded and fragmentary, and passenger pigeon specimens have been used in various studies to discover improved methods of analyzing and assembling genomes from such material. DNA samples are often taken from the toe pads of bird skins in museums, as this can be done without causing significant damage to valuable specimens.[20][21] The passenger pigeon had no known subspecies.[13] Hybridization occurred between the passenger pigeon and the Barbary dove (Streptopelia risoria) in the aviary of Charles Otis Whitman (who owned many of the last captive birds around the turn of the 20th century, and kept them with other pigeon species) but the offspring were infertile.[16][22]

Etymology edit

The genus name, Ectopistes, translates as "moving about" or "wandering", while the specific name, migratorius, indicates its migratory habits.[23] The full binomial can thus be translated as "migratory wanderer". The English common name "passenger pigeon" derives from the French word passager, which means "to pass by" in a fleeting manner.[24][25] While the pigeon was extant, the name "passenger pigeon" was used interchangeably with "wild pigeon".[26] The bird also gained some less-frequently used names, including blue pigeon, merne rouck pigeon, wandering long-tailed dove, and wood pigeon. In the 18th century, the passenger pigeon was known as tourte in New France (in modern Canada), but to the French in Europe it was known as tourtre. In modern French, the bird is known as tourte voyageuse or pigeon migrateur, among other names.[27]

In the Native American Algonquian languages, the pigeon was called amimi by the Lenape, omiimii by the Ojibwe, and mimia by the Kaskaskia Illinois.[28][29][30] Other names in indigenous American languages include ori'te in Mohawk, and putchee nashoba, or "lost dove", in Choctaw.[31] The Seneca people called the pigeon jahgowa, meaning "big bread", as it was a source of food for their tribes.[32] Chief Simon Pokagon of the Potawatomi stated that his people called the pigeon O-me-me-wog, and that the Europeans did not adopt native names for the bird, as it reminded them of their domesticated pigeons, instead calling them "wild" pigeons, as they called the native peoples "wild" men.[33]

Description edit

Turnaround video of an adult male specimen at Naturalis Biodiversity Center

The passenger pigeon was sexually dimorphic in size and coloration. It weighed between 260 and 340 g (9.2 and 12.0 oz).[34] The adult male was about 390 to 410 mm (15.4 to 16.1 in) in length.[35] It had a bluish-gray head, nape, and hindneck. On the sides of the neck and the upper mantle were iridescent display feathers that have variously been described as being a bright bronze, violet or golden-green, depending on the angle of the light. The upper back and wings were a pale or slate gray tinged with olive brown, that turned into grayish-brown on the lower wings. The lower back and rump were a dark blue-gray that became grayish-brown on the upper tail-covert feathers. The greater and median wing-covert feathers were pale gray, with a small number of irregular black spots near the end. The primary and secondary feathers of the wing were a blackish-brown with a narrow white edge on the outer side of the secondaries. The two central tail feathers were brownish gray, and the rest were white.[24][35]

The tail pattern was distinctive as it had white outer edges with blackish spots that were prominently displayed in flight.[35] The lower throat and breast were richly pinkish-rufous, grading into a paler pink further down, and into white on the abdomen and undertail covert feathers. The undertail coverts also had a few black spots. The bill was black, while the feet and legs were a bright coral red. It had a carmine-red iris surrounded by a narrow purplish-red eye-ring.[35] The wing of the male measured 196 to 215 mm (7.7 to 8.5 in), the tail 175 to 210 mm (6.9 to 8.3 in), the bill 15 to 18 mm (0.59 to 0.71 in), and the tarsus was 26 to 28 mm (1.0 to 1.1 in).[24]

Turnaround video of an adult female specimen at Naturalis

The adult female passenger pigeon was slightly smaller than the male at 380 to 400 mm (15.0 to 15.7 in) in length. It was duller than the male overall, and was a grayish-brown on the forehead, crown, and nape down to the scapulars, and the feathers on the sides of the neck had less iridescence than those of the male. The lower throat and breast were a buff-gray that developed into white on the belly and undertail-coverts. It was browner on the upperparts and paler buff brown and less rufous on the underparts than the male. The wings, back, and tail were similar in appearance to those of the male except that the outer edges of the primary feathers were edged in buff or rufous buff.[24][35] The wings had more spotting than those of the male.[34] The tail was shorter than that of the male, and the legs and feet were a paler red. The iris was orange red, with a grayish blue, naked orbital ring. The wing of the female was 180 to 210 mm (7.1 to 8.3 in), the tail 150 to 200 mm (5.9 to 7.9 in), the bill 15 to 18 mm (0.59 to 0.71 in), and the tarsus was 25 to 28 mm (0.98 to 1.10 in).[24]

Turnaround video of a juvenile female specimen at Naturalis

The juvenile passenger pigeon was similar in plumage to the adult female, but lacked the spotting on the wings, and was a darker brownish-gray on the head, neck, and breast. The feathers on the wings had pale gray fringes (also described as white tips), giving it a scaled look. The secondaries were brownish-black with pale edges, and the tertial feathers had a rufous wash. The primaries were also edged with a rufous-brown color. The neck feathers had no iridescence. The legs and feet were dull red, and the iris was brownish, and surrounded by a narrow carmine ring.[24][35] The plumage of the sexes was similar during their first year.[36]

Of the hundreds of surviving skins, only one appears to be aberrant in color—an adult female from the collection of Walter Rothschild, Natural History Museum at Tring. It is a washed brown on the upper parts, wing covert, secondary feathers, and tail (where it would otherwise have been gray), and white on the primary feathers and underparts. The normally black spots are brown, and it is pale gray on the head, lower back, and upper-tail covert feathers, yet the iridescence is unaffected. The brown mutation is a result of a reduction in eumelanin, due to incomplete synthesis (oxidation) of this pigment. This sex-linked mutation is common in female wild birds, but it is thought the white feathers of this specimen are instead the result of bleaching due to exposure to sunlight.[37]

 
Skeleton of a male bird, 1914

The passenger pigeon was physically adapted for speed, endurance, and maneuverability in flight, and has been described as having a streamlined version of the typical pigeon shape, such as that of the generalized rock dove (Columba livia). The wings were very long and pointed, and measured 220 mm (8.7 in) from the wing-chord to the primary feathers, and 120 mm (4.7 in) to the secondaries. The tail, which accounted for much of its overall length, was long and wedge-shaped (or graduated), with two central feathers longer than the rest. The body was slender and narrow, and the head and neck were small.[24][38][39]

The internal anatomy of the passenger pigeon has rarely been described. Robert W. Shufeldt found little to differentiate the bird's osteology from that of other pigeons when examining a male skeleton in 1914, but Julian P. Hume noted several distinct features in a more detailed 2015 description. The pigeon had particularly large breast muscles that indicate powerful flight (musculus pectoralis major for downstroke and the smaller musculus supracoracoideus for upstroke). The coracoid bone (which connects the scapula, furcula, and sternum) was large relative to the size of the bird, 33.4 mm (1.31 in), with straighter shafts and more robust articular ends than in other pigeons. The furcula had a sharper V-shape and was more robust, with expanded articular ends. The scapula was long, straight, and robust, and its distal end was enlarged. The sternum was very large and robust compared to that of other pigeons; its keel was 25 mm (0.98 in) deep. The overlapping uncinate processes, which stiffen the ribcage, were very well developed. The wing bones (humerus, radius, ulna, carpometacarpus) were short but robust compared to other pigeons. The leg bones were similar to those of other pigeons.[39][40][41]

Vocalizations edit

 
Musical notes documenting male vocalizations, compiled by Wallace Craig, 1911

The noise produced by flocks of passenger pigeons was described as deafening, audible for miles away, and the bird's voice as loud, harsh, and unmusical. It was also described by some as clucks, twittering, and cooing, and as a series of low notes, instead of an actual song. The birds apparently made croaking noises when building nests, and bell-like sounds when mating. During feeding, some individuals would give alarm calls when facing a threat, and the rest of the flock would join the sound while taking off.[24][42][43]

In 1911, American behavioral scientist Wallace Craig published an account of the gestures and sounds of this species as a series of descriptions and musical notations, based on observation of C. O. Whitman's captive passenger pigeons in 1903. Craig compiled these records to assist in identifying potential survivors in the wild (as the physically similar mourning doves could otherwise be mistaken for passenger pigeons), while noting this "meager information" was likely all that would be left on the subject. According to Craig, one call was a simple harsh "keck" that could be given twice in succession with a pause in between. This was said to be used to attract the attention of another pigeon. Another call was a more frequent and variable scolding. This sound was described as "kee-kee-kee-kee" or "tete! tete! tete!", and was used to call either to its mate or towards other creatures it considered to be enemies. One variant of this call, described as a long, drawn-out "tweet", could be used to call down a flock of passenger pigeons passing overhead, which would then land in a nearby tree. "Keeho" was a soft cooing that, while followed by louder "keck" notes or scolding, was directed at the bird's mate. A nesting passenger pigeon would also give off a stream of at least eight mixed notes that were both high and low in tone and ended with "keeho". Overall, female passenger pigeons were quieter and called infrequently. Craig suggested that the loud, strident voice and "degenerated" musicality was the result of living in populous colonies where only the loudest sounds could be heard.[42][44]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Specimen in flying pose, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University

The passenger pigeon was found across most of North America east of the Rocky Mountains, from the Great Plains to the Atlantic coast in the east, to the south of Canada in the north, and the north of Mississippi in the southern United States, coinciding with its primary habitat, the eastern deciduous forests. Within this range, it constantly migrated in search of food and shelter. It is unclear if the birds favored particular trees and terrain, but they were possibly not restricted to one type, as long as their numbers could be supported.[24][34] It originally bred from the southern parts of eastern and central Canada south to eastern Kansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, and Georgia in the United States, but the primary breeding range was in southern Ontario and the Great Lakes states south through states north of the Appalachian Mountains.[45] Though the western forests were ecologically similar to those in the east, these were occupied by band-tailed pigeons, which may have kept out the passenger pigeons through competitive exclusion.[16]

The passenger pigeon wintered from Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina south to Texas, the Gulf Coast, and northern Florida, though flocks occasionally wintered as far north as southern Pennsylvania and Connecticut. It preferred to winter in large swamps, particularly those with alder trees; if swamps were not available, forested areas, particularly with pine trees, were favored roosting sites. There were also sightings of passenger pigeons outside of its normal range, including in several Western states, Bermuda, Cuba, and Mexico, particularly during severe winters.[45][46][47] It has been suggested that some of these extralimital records may have been due to the paucity of observers rather than the actual extent of passenger pigeons; North America was then unsettled country, and the bird may have appeared anywhere on the continent except for the far west.[34] There were also records of stragglers in Scotland, Ireland, and France, although these birds may have been escaped captives, or the records incorrect.[24][45]

More than 130 passenger pigeon fossils have been found scattered across 25 US states, including in the La Brea Tar Pits of California. These records date as far back as 100,000 years ago in the Pleistocene era, during which the pigeon's range extended to several western states that were not a part of its modern range. The abundance of the species in these regions and during this time is unknown.[45][48][49]

Ecology and behavior edit

 
Live male in Whitman's aviary, 1896/98

The passenger pigeon was nomadic, constantly migrating in search of food, shelter, or nesting grounds.[24] In his 1831 Ornithological Biography, American naturalist and artist John James Audubon described a migration he observed in 1813 as follows:

I dismounted, seated myself on an eminence, and began to mark with my pencil, making a dot for every flock that passed. In a short time finding the task which I had undertaken impracticable, as the birds poured in in countless multitudes, I rose and, counting the dots then put down, found that 163 had been made in twenty-one minutes. I traveled on, and still met more the farther I proceeded. The air was literally filled with Pigeons; the light of noon-day was obscured as by an eclipse; the dung fell in spots, not unlike melting flakes of snow, and the continued buzz of wings had a tendency to lull my senses to repose ... I cannot describe to you the extreme beauty of their aerial evolutions, when a hawk chanced to press upon the rear of the flock. At once, like a torrent, and with a noise like thunder, they rushed into a compact mass, pressing upon each other towards the center. In these almost solid masses, they darted forward in undulating and angular lines, descended and swept close over the earth with inconceivable velocity, mounted perpendicularly so as to resemble a vast column, and, when high, were seen wheeling and twisting within their continued lines, which then resembled the coils of a gigantic serpent ... Before sunset I reached Louisville, distant from Hardensburgh fifty-five miles. The Pigeons were still passing in undiminished numbers and continued to do so for three days in succession.[50]

These flocks were frequently described as being so dense that they blackened the sky and as having no sign of subdivisions. The flocks ranged from only 1.0 m (3.3 ft) above the ground in windy conditions to as high as 400 m (1,300 ft). These migrating flocks were typically in narrow columns that twisted and undulated, and they were reported as being in nearly every conceivable shape.[46] A skilled flyer, the passenger pigeon is estimated to have averaged 100 km/h (62 mph) during migration. It flew with quick, repeated flaps that increased the bird's velocity the closer the wings got to the body. It was equally adept and quick flying through a forest as through open space. A flock was also adept at following the lead of the pigeon in front of it, and flocks swerved together to avoid a predator. When landing, the pigeon flapped its wings repeatedly before raising them at the moment of landing. The pigeon was awkward when on the ground, and moved around with jerky, alert steps.[51]

 
Illustration of migrating flocks, Frank Bond, 1920

The passenger pigeon was one of the most social of all land birds.[52] Estimated to have numbered three to five billion at the height of its population, it may have been the most numerous bird on Earth; researcher Arlie W. Schorger believed that it accounted for between 25 and 40 percent of the total land bird population in the United States.[53] The passenger pigeon's historic population is roughly the equivalent of the number of birds that overwinter in the United States every year in the early 21st century.[54] Even within their range, the size of individual flocks could vary greatly. In November 1859, Henry David Thoreau, writing in Concord, Massachusetts, noted that "quite a little flock of [passenger] pigeons bred here last summer,"[55] while only seven years later, in 1866, one flock in southern Ontario was described as being 1.5 km (0.93 mi) wide and 500 km (310 mi) long, took 14 hours to pass, and held in excess of 3.5 billion birds.[56] Such a number would likely represent a large fraction of the entire population at the time, or perhaps all of it.[16] Most estimations of numbers were based on single migrating colonies, and it is unknown how many of these existed at a given time. American writer Christopher Cokinos has suggested that if the birds flew single file, they would have stretched around the Earth 22 times.[57]

A 2014 genetic study (based on coalescent theory and on "sequences from most of the genome" of three individual passenger pigeons) suggested that the passenger pigeon population experienced dramatic fluctuations across the last million years, due to their dependence on availability of mast (which itself fluctuates). The study suggested the bird was not always abundant, mainly persisting at around 1/10,000 the amount of the several billions estimated in the 1800s, with vastly larger numbers present during outbreak phases.[58][59] Some early accounts also suggest that the appearance of flocks in great numbers was an irregular occurrence.[36] These large fluctuations in population may have been the result of a disrupted ecosystem and have consisted of outbreak populations much larger than those common in pre-European times.[60] The authors of the 2014 genetic study note that a similar analysis of the human population size arrives at an "effective population size" of between 9,000 and 17,000 individuals (or approximately 1/550,000th of the peak total human population size of 7 billion cited in the study).[58]

For a 2017 genetic study, the authors sequenced the genomes of two additional passenger pigeons, as well as analyzing the mitochondrial DNA of 41 individuals.[61][62][63] This study found evidence that the passenger-pigeon population had been stable for at least the previous 20,000 years.[64] The study also found that the size of the passenger pigeon population over that time period had been larger than the 2014 genetic study had found. However, the 2017 study's "conservative" estimate of an "effective population size" of 13 million birds is still only about 1/300th of the bird's estimated historic population of approximately 3–5 billion before their "19th century decline and eventual extinction."[61] A similar study inferring human population size from genetics (published in 2008, and using human mitochondrial DNA and Bayesian coalescent inference methods) showed considerable accuracy in reflecting overall patterns of human population growth as compared to data deduced by other means—though the study arrived at a human effective population size (as of 1600 AD, for Africa, Eurasia, and the Americas combined) that was roughly 1/1000 of the census population estimate for the same time and area based on anthropological and historical evidence.[65][66]

The 2017 passenger-pigeon genetic study also found that, in spite of its large population size, the genetic diversity was very low in the species. The authors suggested that this was a side-effect of natural selection, which theory and previous empirical studies suggested could have a particularly great impact on species with very large and cohesive populations.[67][68] Natural selection can reduce genetic diversity over extended regions of a genome through 'selective sweeps' or 'background selection'. The authors found evidence of a faster rate of adaptive evolution and faster removal of harmful mutations in passenger pigeons compared to band-tailed pigeons, which are some of passenger pigeons' closest living relatives. They also found evidence of lower genetic diversity in regions of the passenger pigeon genome that have lower rates of genetic recombination. This is expected if natural selection, via selective sweeps or background selection, reduced their genetic diversity, but not if population instability did. The study concluded that earlier suggestion that population instability contributed to the extinction of the species was invalid.[61] Evolutionary biologist A. Townsend Peterson said of the two passenger-pigeon genetic studies (published in 2014 and 2017) that, though the idea of extreme fluctuations in the passenger-pigeon population was "deeply entrenched," he was persuaded by the 2017 study's argument, due to its "in-depth analysis" and "massive data resources."[62]

 
Juvenile (left), male (center), female (right), Louis Agassiz Fuertes, 1910

A communally roosting species, the passenger pigeon chose roosting sites that could provide shelter and enough food to sustain their large numbers for an indefinite period. The time spent at one roosting site may have depended on the extent of human persecution, weather conditions, or other, unknown factors. Roosts ranged in size and extent, from a few acres to 260 km2 (100 sq mi) or greater. Some roosting areas would be reused for subsequent years, others would only be used once.[24] The passenger pigeon roosted in such numbers that even thick tree branches would break under the strain. The birds frequently piled on top of each other's backs to roost. They rested in a slumped position that hid their feet. They slept with their bills concealed by the feathers in the middle of the breast while holding their tail at a 45-degree angle.[51] Dung could accumulate under a roosting site to a depth of over 0.3 m (1.0 ft).[42]

 
Alert parent bird posing defiantly towards the camera (1896, published 1913)

If the pigeon became alert, it would often stretch out its head and neck in line with its body and tail, then nod its head in a circular pattern. When aggravated by another pigeon, it raised its wings threateningly, but passenger pigeons almost never actually fought. The pigeon bathed in shallow water, and afterwards lay on each side in turn and raised the opposite wing to dry it.[51]

The passenger pigeon drank at least once a day, typically at dawn, by fully inserting its bill into lakes, small ponds, and streams. Pigeons were seen perching on top of each other to access water, and if necessary, the species could alight on open water to drink.[42] One of the primary causes of natural mortality was the weather, and every spring many individuals froze to death after migrating north too early. In captivity, a passenger pigeon was capable of living at least 15 years; Martha, the last known living passenger pigeon, was at least 17 and possibly as old as 29 when she died. It is undocumented how long a wild pigeon lived.[69]

The bird is believed to have played a significant ecological role in the composition of pre-Columbian forests of eastern North America. For instance, while the passenger pigeon was extant, forests were dominated by white oaks. This species germinated in the fall, therefore making its seeds almost useless as a food source during the spring breeding season, while red oaks produced acorns during the spring, which were devoured by the pigeons. The absence of the passenger pigeon's seed consumption may have contributed to the modern dominance of red oaks. Due to the immense amount of dung present at roosting sites, few plants grew for years after the pigeons left. Also, the accumulation of flammable debris (such as limbs broken from trees and foliage killed by excrement) at these sites may have increased both the frequency and intensity of forest fires, which would have favored fire-tolerant species, such as bur oaks, black oaks, and white oaks over less fire-tolerant species, such as red oaks, thus helping to explain the change in the composition of eastern forests since the passenger pigeon's extinction (from white oaks, bur oaks, and black oaks predominating in presettlement forests, to the "dramatic expansion" of red oaks today).[54]

A study released in 2018 concluded that the "vast numbers" of passenger pigeons present for "tens of thousands of years" would have influenced the evolution of the tree species whose seeds they ate. Those masting trees that produced seeds during the spring nesting season (such as red oaks) evolved so that some portion of their seeds would be too large for passenger pigeons to swallow (thus allowing some of their seeds to escape predation and grow new trees). White oak, in contrast, with its seeds sized consistently in the edible range, evolved an irregular masting pattern that took place in the fall, when fewer passenger pigeons would have been present. The study further concluded that this allowed white oaks to be the dominant tree species in regions where passenger pigeons were commonly present in the spring.[70]

With the large numbers in passenger pigeon flocks, the excrement they produced was enough to destroy surface-level vegetation at long-term roosting sites, while adding high quantities of nutrients to the ecosystem. Because of this—along with the breaking of tree limbs under their collective weight and the great amount of mast they consumed—passenger pigeons are thought to have influenced both the structure of eastern forests and the composition of the species present there.[54] Due to these influences, some ecologists have considered the passenger pigeon a keystone species,[58] with the disappearance of their vast flocks leaving a major gap in the ecosystem.[71] Their role in creating forest disturbances has been linked to greater vertebrate diversity in forests by creating more niches for animals to fill.[72] To help fill that ecological gap, it has been proposed that modern land managers attempt to replicate some of their effects on the ecosystem by creating openings in forest canopies to provide more understory light.[73]

The American chestnut trees that provided much of the mast on which the passenger pigeon fed was itself almost driven to extinction by an imported Asian fungus (chestnut blight) around 1905. As many as thirty billion trees are thought to have died as a result in the following decades, but this did not affect the passenger pigeon, which was already extinct in the wild at the time.[24]

After the disappearance of the passenger pigeon, the population of another acorn feeding species, the white-footed mouse, grew exponentially because of the increased availability of the seeds of the oak, beech and chestnut trees.[74] It has been speculated[75] that the extinction of passenger pigeons may have increased the prevalence of tick-borne lyme disease in modern times as white-footed mice are the reservoir hosts of Borrelia burgdorferi.[76]

Diet edit

 
Acorns in South Carolina, among the diet of this bird

Beeches and oaks produced the mast needed to support nesting and roosting flocks.[77] The passenger pigeon changed its diet depending on the season. In the fall, winter, and spring, it mainly ate beechnuts, acorns, and chestnuts. During the summer, berries and softer fruits, such as blueberries, grapes, cherries, mulberries, pokeberries, and bunchberry, became the main objects of its consumption. It also ate worms, caterpillars, snails, and other invertebrates, particularly while breeding.[24][47] It took advantage of cultivated grains, particularly buckwheat, when it found them. It was especially fond of salt, which it ingested either from brackish springs or salty soil.[77]

Mast occurs in large quantities in different places at different times, and rarely in consecutive years, which is one of the reasons why the large flocks were constantly on the move. As mast is produced during autumn, there would have to be a large amount of it left by the summer, when the young were reared. It is unknown how they located this fluctuating food source, but their eyesight and flight powers helped them survey large areas for places that could provide food enough for a temporary stay.[16][24]

 
Internal organs of Martha, the last individual: cr. denotes the crop, gz. the gizzard, 1915

The passenger pigeon foraged in flocks of tens or hundreds of thousands of individuals that overturned leaves, dirt, and snow with their bills in search of food. One observer described the motion of such a flock in search of mast as having a rolling appearance, as birds in the back of the flock flew overhead to the front of the flock, dropping leaves and grass in flight.[24][47] The flocks had wide leading edges to better scan the landscape for food sources.[77]

When nuts on a tree loosened from their caps, a pigeon would land on a branch and, while flapping vigorously to stay balanced, grab the nut, pull it loose from its cap, and swallow it whole. Collectively, a foraging flock was capable of removing nearly all fruits and nuts from their path. Birds in the back of the flock flew to the front in order to pick over unsearched ground; however, birds never ventured far from the flock and hurried back if they became isolated. It is believed that the pigeons used social cues to identify abundant sources of food, and a flock of pigeons that saw others feeding on the ground often joined them.[47] During the day, the birds left the roosting forest to forage on more open land.[46] They regularly flew 100 to 130 km (62 to 81 mi) away from their roost daily in search of food, and some pigeons reportedly traveled as far as 160 km (99 mi), leaving the roosting area early and returning at night.[24][54]

The passenger pigeon had a very elastic mouth and throat, allowing for increased capacity, and a joint in the lower bill enabled it to swallow acorns whole. It could store large quantities of food in its crop, which could expand to about the size of an orange, causing the neck to bulge and allowing a bird quickly to grab any food it discovered. The crop was described as being capable of holding at least 17 acorns or 28 beechnuts, 11 grains of corn, 100 maple seeds, plus other material; it was estimated that a passenger pigeon needed to eat about 61 cm3 (3.7 in3) of food a day to survive. If shot, a pigeon with a crop full of nuts would fall to the ground with a sound described as like the rattle of a bag of marbles. After feeding, the pigeons perched on branches and digested the food stored in their crop overnight.[24][47][54]

The pigeon could eat and digest 100 g (3.5 oz) of acorns per day.[78] At the historic population of three billion passenger pigeons, this amounted to 210,000,000 L (55,000,000 US gal) of food a day.[54] The pigeon could regurgitate food from its crop when more desirable food became available.[43] A 2018 study found that the dietary range of the passenger pigeon was restricted to certain sizes of seed, due to the size of its gape. This would have prevented it from eating some of the seeds of trees such as red oaks, the black oak, and the American chestnut. Specifically, the study found that between 13% and 69% of red oak seeds were too large for passenger pigeons to have swallowed, that only a "small proportion" of the seeds of black oaks and American chestnuts were too large for the birds to consume, and that all white oak seeds were sized within an edible range. They also found that seeds would be completely destroyed during digestion, which therefore hindered dispersal of seeds this way. Instead, passenger pigeons may have spread seeds by regurgitation, or after dying.[70]

Reproduction edit

 
Nesting captive bird, wary of the photographer

Other than finding roosting sites, the migrations of the passenger pigeon were connected with finding places appropriate for this communally breeding bird to nest and raise its young. It is not certain how many times a year the birds bred; once seems most likely, but some accounts suggest more. The nesting period lasted around four to six weeks. The flock arrived at a nesting ground around March in southern latitudes, and some time later in more northern areas.[24][53] The pigeon had no site fidelity, often choosing to nest in a different location each year.[69] The formation of a nesting colony did not necessarily take place until several months after the pigeons arrived on their breeding grounds, typically during late March, April, or May.[79]

The colonies, which were known as "cities", were immense, ranging from 49 ha (120 acres) to thousands of hectares in size, and were often long and narrow in shape (L-shaped), with a few areas untouched for unknown reasons. Due to the topography, they were rarely continuous. Since no accurate data was recorded, it is not possible to give more than estimates on the size and population of these nesting areas, but most accounts mention colonies containing millions of birds. The largest nesting area ever recorded was in central Wisconsin in 1871; it was reported as covering 2,200 km2 (850 sq mi), with the number of birds nesting there estimated to be around 136,000,000. As well as these "cities", there were regular reports of much smaller flocks or even individual pairs setting up a nesting site.[24][79] The birds do not seem to have formed as vast breeding colonies at the periphery of their range.[36]

Courtship took place at the nesting colony.[52] Unlike other pigeons, courtship took place on a branch or perch. The male, with a flourish of the wings, made a "keck" call while near a female. The male then gripped tightly to the branch and vigorously flapped his wings up and down. When the male was close to the female, he then pressed against her on the perch with his head held high and pointing at her.[51] If receptive, the female pressed back against the male.[52] When ready to mate, the pair preened each other. This was followed by the birds billing, in which the female inserted its bill into and clasped the male's bill, shook for a second, and separated quickly while standing next to each other. The male then scrambled onto the female's back and copulated, which was then followed by soft clucking and occasionally more preening.[52] John James Audubon described the courtship of the passenger pigeon as follows:

 
Nest and egg in Whitman's aviary

Thither the countless myriads resort, and prepare to fulfill one of the great laws of nature. At this period the note of the Pigeon is a soft coo-coo-coo-coo much shorter than that of the domestic species. The common notes resemble the monosyllables kee-kee-kee-kee, the first being the loudest, the others gradually diminishing In power. The male assumes a pompous demeanor, and follows the female, whether on the ground or on the branches, with spread tail and drooping wings, which it rubs against the part over which it is moving. The body is elevated, the throat swells, the eyes sparkle. He continues his notes, and now and then rises on the wing, and flies a few yards to approach the fugitive and timorous female. Like the domestic Pigeon and other species, they caress each other by billing, in which action, the bill of the one is introduced transversely into that of the other, and both parties alternately disgorge the contents of their crop by repeated efforts.[50]

After observing captive birds, Wallace Craig found that this species did less charging and strutting than other pigeons (as it was awkward on the ground), and thought it probable that no food was transferred during their brief billing (unlike in other pigeons), and he therefore considered Audubon's description partially based on analogy with other pigeons as well as imagination.[44][51]

 
Preserved egg, Muséum de Toulouse

Nests were built immediately after pair formation and took two to four days to construct; this process was highly synchronized within a colony.[79] The female chose the nesting site by sitting on it and flicking its wings. The male then carefully selected nesting materials, typically twigs, and handed them to the female over her back. The male then went in search of more nesting material while the female constructed the nest beneath herself. Nests were built between 2.0 and 20.1 m (6.6 and 65.9 ft) above the ground, though typically above 4.0 m (13.1 ft), and were made of 70 to 110 twigs woven together to create a loose, shallow bowl through which the egg could easily be seen. This bowl was then typically lined with finer twigs. The nests were about 150 mm (5.9 in) wide, 61 mm (2.4 in) high, and 19 mm (0.75 in) deep. Though the nest has been described as crude and flimsy compared to those of many other birds, remains of nests could be found at sites where nesting had taken place several years prior. Nearly every tree capable of supporting nests had them, often more than 50 per tree; one hemlock was recorded as holding 317 nests. The nests were placed on strong branches close to the tree trunks. Some accounts state that ground under the nesting area looked as if it had been swept clean, due to all the twigs being collected at the same time, yet this area would also have been covered in dung.[24][43][80] As both sexes took care of the nest, the pairs were monogamous for the duration of the nesting.[51]

 
Live nestling or squab

Generally, the eggs were laid during the first two weeks of April across the pigeon's range.[79] Each female laid its egg immediately or almost immediately after the nest was completed; sometimes the pigeon was forced to lay it on the ground if the nest was not complete.[81] The normal clutch size appears to have been a single egg, but there is some uncertainty about this, as two have also been reported from the same nests.[24] Occasionally, a second female laid its egg in another female's nest, resulting in two eggs being present.[82] The egg was white and oval shaped and averaged 40 by 34 mm (1.6 by 1.3 in) in size.[80] If the egg was lost, it was possible for the pigeon to lay a replacement egg within a week.[81] A whole colony was known to re-nest after a snowstorm forced them to abandon their original colony.[69] The egg was incubated by both parents for 12 to 14 days, with the male incubating it from midmorning to midafternoon and the female incubating it for the rest of the time.[24][81]

Upon hatching, the nestling (or squab) was blind and sparsely covered with yellow, hairlike down.[81] The nestling developed quickly and within 14 days weighed as much as its parents. During this brooding period both parents took care of the nestling, with the male attending in the middle of the day and the female at other times. The nestlings were fed crop milk (a substance similar to curd, produced in the crops of the parent birds) exclusively for the first days after hatching. Adult food was gradually introduced after three to six days. After 13 to 15 days, the parents fed the nestling for a last time and then abandoned it, leaving the nesting area en masse. The nestling begged in the nest for a day or two, before climbing from the nest and fluttering to the ground, whereafter it moved around, avoided obstacles, and begged for food from nearby adults. It was another three or four days before it fledged.[24][82] The entire nesting cycle lasted about 30 days.[43] It is unknown whether colonies re-nested after a successful nesting.[69] The passenger pigeon sexually matured during its first year and bred the following spring.[82]

Alfred Russel Wallace, in his historic 1858 paper On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection, used the passenger pigeon as an example of an immensely successful species despite laying fewer eggs than most other birds:

It would therefore appear that, as far as the continuance of the species and the keeping up the average number of individuals are concerned, large broods are superfluous. On the average all above one become food for hawks and kites, wild cats and weasels, or perish of cold and hunger as winter comes on. This is strikingly proved by the case of particular species; for we find that their abundance in individuals bears no relation whatever to their fertility in producing offspring. Perhaps the most remarkable instance of an immense bird population is that of the passenger pigeon of the United States, which lays only one, or at most two eggs, and is said to rear generally but one young one. Why is this bird so extraordinarily abundant, while others producing two or three times as many young are much less plentiful? The explanation is not difficult. The food most congenial to this species, and on which it thrives best, is abundantly distributed over a very extensive region, offering such differences of soil and climate, that in one part or another of the area the supply never fails. The bird is capable of a very rapid and long-continued flight, so that it can pass without fatigue over the whole of the district it inhabits, and as soon as the supply of food begins to fail in one place is able to discover a fresh feeding-ground. This example strikingly shows us that the procuring a constant supply of wholesome food is almost the sole condition requisite for ensuring the rapid increase of a given species, since neither the limited fecundity, nor the unrestrained attacks of birds of prey and of man are here sufficient to check it. In no other birds are these peculiar circumstances so strikingly combined. Either their food is more liable to failure, or they have not sufficient power of wing to search for it over an extensive area, or during some season of the year it becomes very scarce, and less wholesome substitutes have to be found; and thus, though more fertile in offspring, they can never increase beyond the supply of food in the least favourable seasons.[83]

Predators and parasites edit

 
Immature bird; the young were vulnerable to predators after leaving the nest

Nesting colonies attracted large numbers of predators, including American minks (Neogale vison), long-tailed weasels (Neogale frenata), American martens (Martes americana), and raccoons (Procyon lotor) that preyed on eggs and nestlings, birds of prey, such as owls, hawks, and eagles that preyed on nestlings and adults, and wolves (Canis lupus), foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus and Vulpes vulpes), bobcats (Lynx rufus), American black bears (Ursus americanus), and cougars (Puma concolor) that preyed on injured adults and fallen nestlings. Hawks of the genus Accipiter and falcons pursued and preyed upon pigeons in flight, which in turn executed complex aerial maneuvers to avoid them; Cooper's hawk (Accipiter cooperii) was known as the "great pigeon hawk" due to its successes, and these hawks allegedly followed migrating passenger pigeons.[52] While many predators were drawn to the flocks, individual pigeons were largely protected due to the sheer size of the flock, and overall little damage could be inflicted on the flock by predation.[52] Despite the number of predators, nesting colonies were so large that they were estimated to have a 90% success rate if not disturbed.[69] After being abandoned and leaving the nest, the very fat juveniles were vulnerable to predators until they were able to fly. The sheer number of juveniles on the ground meant that only a small percentage of them were killed; predator satiation may therefore be one of the reasons for the extremely social habits and communal breeding of the species.[24][32]

Two parasites have been recorded on passenger pigeons. One species of phtilopterid louse, Columbicola extinctus, was originally thought to have lived on just passenger pigeons and to have become coextinct with them. This was proven inaccurate in 1999 when C. extinctus was rediscovered living on band-tailed pigeons.[84][85] This, and the fact that the related louse C. angustus is mainly found on cuckoo-doves, further supports the relation between these pigeons, as the phylogeny of lice broadly mirrors that of their hosts.[19] Another louse, Campanulotes defectus, was thought to have been unique to the passenger pigeon, but is now believed to have been a case of a contaminated specimen, as the species is considered to be the still-extant Campanulotes flavus of Australia.[85] There is no record of a wild pigeon dying of either disease or parasites.[69]

Relationship with humans edit

 
Billing pair by John James Audubon, from The Birds of America, 1827–1838. This image has been criticized for its scientific inaccuracy.

For fifteen thousand years or more before the arrival of Europeans in the Americas, passenger pigeons and Native Americans coexisted in the forests of what would later become the eastern part of the continental United States.[86][87][88] A study published in 2008 found that, throughout most of the Holocene, Native American land-use practices greatly influenced forest composition. The regular use of prescribed burn, the girdling of unwanted trees, and the planting and tending of favored trees suppressed the populations of a number of tree species that did not produce nuts, acorns, or fruit, while increasing the populations of numerous tree species that did. In addition, the burning away of forest-floor litter made these foods easier to find, once they had fallen from the trees.[89] Some have argued that such Native American land-use practices increased the populations of various animal species, including the passenger pigeon, by increasing the food available to them,[90][91][92] while elsewhere it has been claimed that, by hunting passenger pigeons and competing with them for some kinds of nuts and acorns, Native Americans suppressed their population size.[93] Genetic research may shed some light on this question. A 2017 study of passenger-pigeon DNA found that the passenger-pigeon population size had been stable for 20,000 years prior to its 19th-century decline and subsequent extinction, while a 2016 study of ancient Native American DNA found that the Native American population went through a period of rapid expansion, increasing 60-fold, starting about 13–16 thousand years ago. If both of these studies are correct, then a great change in the size of the Native American population had no apparent impact on the size of the passenger-pigeon population. This suggests that the net effect of Native American activities on passenger-pigeon population size was neutral.[61][94]

The passenger pigeon played a religious role for some northern Native American tribes. The Wyandot people (or Huron) believed that every twelve years during the Feast of the Dead, the souls of the dead changed into passenger pigeons, which were then hunted and eaten.[95] Before hunting the juvenile pigeons, the Seneca people made an offering of wampum and brooches to the old passenger pigeons; these were placed in a small kettle or other receptacle by a smoky fire.[95] The Ho-Chunk people considered the passenger pigeon to be the bird of the chief, as they were served whenever the chieftain gave a feast.[96] The Seneca people believed that a white pigeon was the chief of the passenger pigeon colony, and that a Council of Birds had decided that the pigeons had to give their bodies to the Seneca because they were the only birds that nested in colonies. The Seneca developed a pigeon dance as a way of showing their gratitude.[96]

French explorer Jacques Cartier was the first European to report on passenger pigeons, during his voyage in 1534.[97] The bird was subsequently observed and noted by historical figures such as Samuel de Champlain and Cotton Mather. Most early accounts dwell on the vast number of pigeons, the resulting darkened skies, and the enormous amount of hunted birds (50,000 birds were reportedly sold at a Boston market in 1771).[57] The early colonists thought that large flights of pigeons would be followed by ill fortune or sickness. When the pigeons wintered outside of their normal range, some believed that they would have "a sickly summer and autumn."[98] In the 18th and 19th centuries, various parts of the pigeon were thought to have medicinal properties. The blood was supposed to be good for eye disorders, the powdered stomach lining was used to treat dysentery, and the dung was used to treat a variety of ailments, including headaches, stomach pains, and lethargy.[99] Though they did not last as long as the feathers of a goose, the feathers of the passenger pigeon were frequently used for bedding. Pigeon feather beds were so popular that for a time in Saint-Jérôme, Quebec, every dowry included a bed and pillows made of pigeon feathers. In 1822, one family in Chautauqua County, New York, killed 4,000 pigeons in a day solely for this purpose.[100]

 
Painting of a male, K. Hayashi, c. 1900

The passenger pigeon was featured in the writings of many significant early naturalists, as well as accompanying illustrations. Mark Catesby's 1731 illustration, the first published depiction of this bird, is somewhat crude, according to some later commentators. The original watercolor that the engraving is based on was bought by the British royal family in 1768, along with the rest of Catesby's watercolors. The naturalists Alexander Wilson and John James Audubon both witnessed large pigeon migrations first hand, and published detailed accounts wherein both attempted to deduce the total number of birds involved. The most famous and often reproduced depiction of the passenger pigeon is Audubon's illustration (handcolored aquatint) in his book The Birds of America, published between 1827 and 1838. Audubon's image has been praised for its artistic qualities, but criticized for its supposed scientific inaccuracies. As Wallace Craig and R. W. Shufeldt (among others) pointed out, the birds are shown perched and billing one above the other, whereas they would instead have done this side by side, the male would be the one passing food to the female, and the male's tail would not be spread. Craig and Shufeldt instead cited illustrations by American artist Louis Agassiz Fuertes and Japanese artist K. Hayashi as more accurate depictions of the bird. Illustrations of the passenger pigeon were often drawn after stuffed birds, and Charles R. Knight is the only "serious" artist known to have drawn the species from life. He did so on at least two occasions; in 1903 he drew a bird possibly in one of the three aviaries with surviving birds, and some time before 1914, he drew Martha, the last individual, in the Cincinnati Zoo.[50][57][101][102][103][44]

The bird has been written about (including in poems, songs,[A] and fiction) and illustrated by many notable writers and artists, and is depicted in art to this day, for example in Walton Ford's 2002 painting Falling Bough, and National Medal of Arts winner John A. Ruthven's 2014 mural in Cincinnati, which commemorates the 100th anniversary of Martha's death.[101] The centennial of its extinction was used by the "Project Passenger Pigeon" outreach group to spread awareness about human-induced extinction, and to recognize its relevance in the 21st century. It has been suggested that the passenger pigeon could be used as a "flagship" species to spread awareness of other threatened, but less well-known North American birds.[108]

Hunting edit

 
Depiction of a shooting in northern Louisiana, Smith Bennett, 1875

The passenger pigeon was an important source of food for the people of North America.[109] Native Americans ate pigeons, and tribes near nesting colonies would sometimes move to live closer to them and eat the juveniles, killing them at night with long poles.[110] Many Native Americans were careful not to disturb the adult pigeons, and instead ate only the juveniles as they were afraid that the adults might desert their nesting grounds; in some tribes, disturbing the adult pigeons was considered a crime.[111] Away from the nests, large nets were used to capture adult pigeons, sometimes up to 800 at a time.[112] Low-flying pigeons could be killed by throwing sticks or stones. At one site in Oklahoma, the pigeons leaving their roost every morning flew low enough that the Cherokee could throw clubs into their midst, which caused the lead pigeons to try to turn aside and in the process created a blockade that resulted in a large mass of flying, easily hit pigeons.[113] Among the game birds, passenger pigeons were second only to the wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) in terms of importance for the Native Americans living in the southeastern United States. The bird's fat was stored, often in large quantities, and used as butter. Archaeological evidence supports the idea that Native Americans ate the pigeons frequently prior to colonization.[114]

 
1881 spread showing methods of trapping pigeons for shooting contests

What may be the earliest account of Europeans hunting passenger pigeons dates to January 1565, when the French explorer René Laudonnière wrote of killing close to 10,000 of them around Fort Caroline in a matter of weeks:

There came to us a manna of wood pigeons in such great numbers, that over a span of about seven weeks, each day we killed more than two hundred with arquebuses in the woods around our fort.[115][116]

This amounted to about one passenger pigeon per day for each person in the fort.[117] After European colonization, the passenger pigeon was hunted more intensively and with more sophisticated methods than the more sustainable methods practiced by the natives.[32] Yet it has also been suggested that the species was rare prior to 1492, and that the subsequent increase in their numbers may be due to the decrease in the Native American population (who, as well as hunting the birds, competed with them for mast) caused by European immigration, and the supplementary food (agricultural crops) the immigrants imported[118] (a theory for which Joel Greenberg offered a detailed rebuttal in his book, A Feathered River Across the Sky).[86] The passenger pigeon was of particular value on the frontier, and some settlements counted on its meat to support their population.[119][120] The flavor of the flesh of passenger pigeons varied depending on how they were prepared. In general, juveniles were thought to taste the best, followed by birds fattened in captivity and birds caught in September and October. It was common practice to fatten trapped pigeons before eating them or storing their bodies for winter.[109] Dead pigeons were commonly stored by salting or pickling the bodies; other times, only the breasts of the pigeons were kept, in which case they were typically smoked. In the early 19th century, commercial hunters began netting and shooting the birds to sell as food in city markets, and even as pig fodder. Once pigeon meat became popular, commercial hunting started on a prodigious scale.[120][121]

Passenger pigeons were shot with such ease that many did not consider them to be a game bird, as an amateur hunter could easily bring down six with one shotgun blast; a particularly good shot with both barrels of a shotgun at a roost could kill 61 birds.[122][123] The birds were frequently shot either in flight during migration or immediately after, when they commonly perched in dead, exposed trees.[122] Hunters only had to shoot toward the sky without aiming, and many pigeons would be brought down.[32] The pigeons proved difficult to shoot head-on, so hunters typically waited for the flocks to pass overhead before shooting them. Trenches were sometimes dug and filled with grain so that a hunter could shoot the pigeons along this trench.[124] Hunters largely outnumbered trappers, and hunting passenger pigeons was a popular sport for young boys.[125] In 1871, a single seller of ammunition provided three tons of powder and 16 tons (32,000 lb) of shot during a nesting. In the latter half of the 19th century, thousands of passenger pigeons were captured for use in the sports shooting industry. The pigeons were used as living targets in shooting tournaments, such as "trap-shooting", the controlled release of birds from special traps. Competitions could also consist of people standing regularly spaced while trying to shoot down as many birds as possible in a passing flock.[32][126] The pigeon was considered so numerous that 30,000 birds had to be killed to claim the prize in one competition.[43]

 
Pigeon net in Canada, by James Pattison Cockburn, 1829

There were a wide variety of other methods used to capture and kill passenger pigeons. Nets were propped up to allow passenger pigeons entry, then closed by knocking loose the stick that supported the opening, trapping twenty or more pigeons inside.[127] Tunnel nets were also used to great effect, and one particularly large net was capable of catching 3,500 pigeons at a time.[128] These nets were used by many farmers on their own property as well as by professional trappers.[129] Food would be placed on the ground near the nets to attract the pigeons. Decoy or "stool pigeons" (sometimes blinded by having their eyelids sewn together) were tied to a stool. When a flock of pigeons passed by, a cord would be pulled that made the stool pigeon flutter to the ground, making it seem as if it had found food, and the flock would be lured into the trap.[32][130][131] Salt was also frequently used as bait, and many trappers set up near salt springs.[132] At least one trapper used alcohol-soaked grain as bait to intoxicate the birds and make them easier to kill.[113] Another method of capture was to hunt at a nesting colony, particularly during the period of a few days after the adult pigeons abandoned their nestlings, but before the nestlings could fly. Some hunters used sticks to poke the nestlings out of the nest, while others shot the bottom of a nest with a blunt arrow to dislodge the pigeon. Others cut down a nesting tree in such a way that when it fell, it would also hit a second nesting tree and dislodge the pigeons within.[133] In one case, 6 km2 (1,500 acres) of large trees were speedily cut down to get birds, and such methods were common.[32] A severe method was to set fire to the base of a tree nested with pigeons; the adults would flee and the juveniles would fall to the ground.[134][135] Sulfur was sometimes burned beneath the nesting tree to suffocate the birds, which fell out of the tree in a weakened state.[136]

 
Trapper Albert Cooper with blind decoy pigeons for luring wild birds, c. 1870

By the mid-19th century, railroads had opened new opportunities for pigeon hunters. While previously it had proved too difficult to ship masses of pigeons to eastern cities, the access provided by the railroad permitted pigeon hunting to become commercialized.[121] An extensive telegraph system was introduced in the 1860s, which improved communication across the United States, making it easier to spread information about the whereabouts of pigeon flocks.[126] After being opened up to the railroads, the town of Plattsburgh, New York, is estimated to have shipped 1.8 million pigeons to larger cities in 1851 alone at a price of 31 to 56 cents a dozen. By the late 19th century, the trade of passenger pigeons had become commercialized. Large commission houses employed trappers (known as "pigeoners") to follow the flocks of pigeons year-round.[137] A single hunter is reported to have sent three million birds to eastern cities during his career.[138] In 1874, at least 600 people were employed as pigeon trappers, a number which grew to 1,200 by 1881. Pigeons were caught in such numbers that by 1876, shipments of dead pigeons were unable to recoup the costs of the barrels and ice needed to ship them.[139] The price of a barrel full of pigeons dropped to below fifty cents, due to overstocked markets. Passenger pigeons were instead kept alive so their meat would be fresh when the birds were killed, and sold once their market value had increased again. Thousands of birds were kept in large pens, though the bad conditions led many to die from lack of food and water, and by fretting (gnawing) themselves; many rotted away before they could be sold.[57]

Hunting of passenger pigeons was documented and depicted in contemporaneous newspapers, wherein various trapping methods and uses were featured. The most often reproduced of these illustrations was captioned "Winter sports in northern Louisiana: shooting wild pigeons", and published in 1875. Passenger pigeons were also seen as agricultural pests, since entire crops could be destroyed by feeding flocks. The bird was described as a "perfect scourge" by some farming communities, and hunters were employed to "wage warfare" on the birds to save grain, as shown in another newspaper illustration from 1867 captioned as "Shooting wild pigeons in Iowa".[126] When comparing these "pests" to the bison of the Great Plains, the valuable resource needed was not the species of animals but the agriculture which was consumed by said animal. The crops that were eaten were seen as marketable calories, proteins, and nutrients all grown for the wrong species.[140][141]

Decline and conservation attempts edit

 
Male and female by Louis Agassiz Fuertes, frontispiece of William Butts Mershon's 1907 The Passenger Pigeon

The notion that the species could be driven to extinction was alien to the early colonists, because the number of birds did not appear to diminish, and also because the concept of extinction was yet to be defined. The bird seems to have been slowly pushed westward after the arrival of Europeans, becoming scarce or absent in the east, though there were still millions of birds in the 1850s. The population must have been decreasing in numbers for many years, though this went unnoticed due to the apparent vast number of birds, which clouded their decline.[57] In 1856 Bénédict Henry Révoil may have been one of the first writers to voice concern about the fate of the passenger pigeon, after witnessing a hunt in 1847:

Everything leads to the belief that the pigeons, which cannot endure isolation and are forced to flee or to change their way of living according to the rate at which North America is populated by the European inflow, will simply end by disappearing from this continent, and, if the world does not end this before a century, I will wager ... that the amateur of ornithology will find no more wild pigeons, except those in the Museums of Natural History.[57]

 
Life drawing by Charles R. Knight, 1903

By the 1870s, the decrease in birds was noticeable, especially after the last large-scale nestings and subsequent slaughters of millions of birds in 1874 and 1878. By this time, large nestings only took place in the north, around the Great Lakes. The last large nesting was in Petoskey, Michigan, in 1878 (following one in Pennsylvania a few days earlier), where 50,000 birds were killed each day for nearly five months. The surviving adults attempted a second nesting at new sites, but were killed by professional hunters before they had a chance to raise any young. Scattered nestings were reported into the 1880s, but the birds were now wary, and commonly abandoned their nests if persecuted.[16][38][57]

By the time of these last nestings, laws had already been enacted to protect the passenger pigeon, but these proved ineffective, as they were unclearly framed and hard to enforce. H. B. Roney, who had witnessed the Petoskey slaughter, led campaigns to protect the pigeon, but was met with resistance, and accusations that he was exaggerating the severity of the situation. Few offenders were prosecuted, mainly some poor trappers, but the large enterprises were not affected.[57] In 1857, a bill was brought forth to the Ohio State Legislature seeking protection for the passenger pigeon, yet a Select Committee of the Senate filed a report stating that the bird did not need protection, being "wonderfully prolific", and dismissing the suggestion that the species could be destroyed.[142] Public protests against trap-shooting erupted in the 1870s, as the birds were badly treated before and after such contests. Conservationists were ineffective in stopping the slaughter. A bill was passed in the Michigan legislature making it illegal to net pigeons within 3 km (1.9 mi) of a nesting area. In 1897, a bill was introduced in the Michigan legislature asking for a 10-year closed season on passenger pigeons. Similar legal measures were passed and then disregarded in Pennsylvania. The gestures proved futile, and by the mid-1890s, the passenger pigeon had almost completely disappeared, and was probably extinct as a breeding bird in the wild.[126][138] Small flocks are known to have existed at this point, since large numbers of birds were still being sold at markets. Thereafter, only small groups or individual birds were reported, many of which were shot on sight.[57]

Last survivors edit

 
"Buttons", the second last confirmed wild passenger pigeon, Cincinnati Zoo

The last recorded nest and egg in the wild were collected in 1895 near Minneapolis. The last wild individual in Louisiana was discovered among a flock of mourning doves in 1896, and subsequently shot. Many late sightings are thought to be false or due to confusion with mourning doves.[57] The last fully authenticated record of a wild passenger pigeon was near Oakford, Illinois, on March 12, 1901, when a male bird was killed, stuffed, and placed in Millikin University in Decatur, Illinois, where it remains today. This was not discovered until 2014, when writer Joel Greenberg found out the date of the bird's shooting while doing research for his book A Feathered River Across the Sky. Greenberg also pointed out a record of a male shot near Laurel, Indiana, on April 3, 1902, that was stuffed but later destroyed.[143]

For many years, the last confirmed wild passenger pigeon was thought to have been shot near Sargents, Pike County, Ohio, on March 24, 1900, when a female bird was killed by a boy named Press Clay Southworth with a BB gun.[38][144] The boy had not recognized the bird as a passenger pigeon, but his parents identified it, and sent it to a taxidermist. The specimen, nicknamed "Buttons" due to the buttons used instead of glass eyes, was donated to the Ohio Historical Society by the family in 1915. The reliability of accounts after the Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana birds are in question. Ornithologist Alexander Wetmore claimed that he saw a pair flying near Independence, Kansas, in April 1905.[145][146] On May 18, 1907, U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt claimed to have seen a "flock of about a dozen two or three times on the wing" while on retreat at his cabin in Pine Knot, Virginia, and that they lit on a dead tree "in such a characteristically pigeon-like attitude"; this sighting was corroborated by a local gentleman whom he had "rambled around with in the woods a good deal" and whom he found to be "a singularly close observer."[147][148] In 1910, the American Ornithologists' Union offered a reward of $3,000 for discovering a nest— equivalent to $83,325 in 2020.[149][150]

 
Whitman's aviary with passenger pigeons and other species, 1896/98

Most captive passenger pigeons were kept for exploitative purposes, but some were housed in zoos and aviaries. Audubon alone claimed to have brought 350 birds to England in 1830, distributing them among various noblemen, and the species is also known to have been kept at London Zoo. Being common birds, these attracted little interest, until the species became rare in the 1890s. By the turn of the 20th century, the last known captive passenger pigeons were divided in three groups; one in Milwaukee, one in Chicago, and one in Cincinnati. There are claims of a few further individuals having been kept in various places, but these accounts are not considered reliable today. The Milwaukee group was kept by David Whittaker, who began his collection in 1888, and possessed fifteen birds some years later, all descended from a single pair.[16][151]

The Chicago group was kept by Charles Otis Whitman, whose collection began with passenger pigeons bought from Whittaker beginning in 1896. He had an interest in studying pigeons, and kept his passenger pigeons with other pigeon species. Whitman brought his pigeons with him from Chicago to Massachusetts by railcar each summer. By 1897, Whitman had bought all of Whittaker's birds, and upon reaching a maximum of 19 individuals, he gave seven back to Whittaker in 1898. Around this time, a series of photographs were taken of these birds; 24 of the photos survive. Some of these images have been reproduced in various media, copies of which are now kept at the Wisconsin Historical Society. It is unclear exactly where, when, and by whom these photos were taken, but some appear to have been taken in Chicago in 1896, others in Massachusetts in 1898, the latter by a J. G. Hubbard. By 1902, Whitman owned sixteen birds. Many eggs were laid by his pigeons, but few hatched, and many hatchlings died. A newspaper inquiry was published that requested "fresh blood" to the flock which had now ceased breeding. By 1907, he was down to two female passenger pigeons that died that winter, and was left with two infertile male hybrids, whose subsequent fate is unknown. By this time, only four (all males) of the birds Whitman had returned to Whittaker were alive, and these died between November 1908 and February 1909.[151][152]

 
"The Folly of 1857 and the Lesson of 1912", frontispiece to William T. Hornaday's Our vanishing wild life (1913), showing Martha in life, the endling of the species.

The Cincinnati Zoo, one of the oldest zoos in the United States, kept passenger pigeons from its beginning in 1875. The zoo kept more than twenty individuals, in a ten-by-twelve-foot cage.[151] Passenger pigeons do not appear to have been kept at the zoo due to their rarity, but to enable guests to have a closer look at a native species.[153] Recognizing the decline of the wild populations, Whitman and the Cincinnati Zoo consistently strove to breed the surviving birds, including attempts at making a rock dove foster passenger pigeon eggs.[154] In 1902, Whitman gave a female passenger pigeon to the zoo; this was possibly the individual later known as Martha, which would become the last living member of the species. Other sources argue that Martha was hatched at the Cincinnati Zoo, had lived there for 25 years, and was the descendant of three pairs of passenger pigeons purchased by the zoo in 1877. It is thought this individual was named Martha because her last cage mate was named George, thereby honoring George Washington and his wife Martha, though it has also been claimed she was named after the mother of a zookeeper's friends.[151][155]

In 1909, Martha and her two male companions at the Cincinnati Zoo became the only known surviving passenger pigeons. One of these males died around April that year, followed by George, the remaining male, on July 10, 1910.[153] It is unknown whether the remains of George were preserved. Martha soon became a celebrity due to her status as an endling, and offers of a $1,000 reward for finding a mate for her brought even more visitors to see her. During her last four years in solitude (her cage was 5.4 by 6 m (18 by 20 ft)), Martha became steadily slower and more immobile; visitors would throw sand at her to make her move, and her cage was roped off in response.[151][156] Martha died of old age on September 1, 1914, and was found lifeless on the floor of her cage.[41][157] It was claimed that she died at 1 p.m., but other sources suggest she died some hours later.[151] Depending on the source, Martha was between 17 and 29 years old at the time of her death, although 29 is the generally accepted figure.[158] At the time, it was suggested that Martha might have died from an apoplectic stroke, as she had suffered one a few weeks before dying.[159] Her body was frozen into a block of ice and sent to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, where it was skinned, dissected, photographed, and mounted.[41][134] As she was molting when she died, she proved difficult to stuff, and previously shed feathers were added to the skin. Martha was on display for many years, but after a period in the museum vaults, she was put back on display at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in 2015.[151] A memorial statue of Martha stands on the grounds of the Cincinnati Zoo, in front of the "Passenger Pigeon Memorial Hut", formerly the aviary wherein Martha lived, now a National Historic Landmark. Incidentally, the last specimen of the extinct Carolina parakeet, named "Incus," died in Martha's cage in 1918; the stuffed remains of that bird are exhibited in the "Memorial Hut".[38][160]

Extinction causes edit

 
Martha at the Smithsonian Museum, 2015

The main reasons for the extinction of the passenger pigeon were the massive scale of hunting, the rapid loss of habitat, and the extremely social lifestyle of the bird, which made it highly vulnerable to the former factors. Deforestation was driven by the need to free land for agriculture and expanding towns, but also due to the demand for lumber and fuel. About 728,000 km2 (180 million acres) were cleared for farming between 1850 and 1910. Though there are still large woodland areas in eastern North America, which support a variety of wildlife, it was not enough to support the vast number of passenger pigeons needed to sustain the population. In contrast, very small populations of nearly extinct birds, such as the kākāpō (Strigops habroptilus) and the takahē (Porphyrio hochstetteri), have been enough to keep those species extant to the present. The combined effects of intense hunting and deforestation has been referred to as a "Blitzkrieg" against the passenger pigeon, and it has been labeled one of the greatest and most senseless human-induced extinctions in history.[32][58][126] As the flocks dwindled in size, the passenger pigeon population decreased below the threshold necessary to propagate the species,[161] an example of the Allee effect.[162]

 
Pigeons being shot to save crops in Iowa, 1867

The 2014 genetic study that found natural fluctuations in population numbers prior to human arrival also concluded that the species routinely recovered from lows in the population, and suggested that one of these lows may have coincided with the intensified hunting by humans in the 1800s, a combination which would have led to the rapid extinction of the species. A similar scenario may also explain the rapid extinction of the Rocky Mountain locust (Melanoplus spretus) during the same period.[58] It has also been suggested that after the population was thinned out, it would be harder for few or solitary birds to locate suitable feeding areas.[16] In addition to the birds killed or driven away by hunting during breeding seasons, many nestlings were also orphaned before being able to fend for themselves. Other, less convincing contributing factors have been suggested at times, including mass drownings, Newcastle disease, and migrations to areas outside their original range.[2][32]

The extinction of the passenger pigeon aroused public interest in the conservation movement, and resulted in new laws and practices which prevented many other species from becoming extinct.[38] The rapid decline of the passenger pigeon has influenced later assessment methods of the extinction risk of endangered animal populations. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has used the passenger pigeon as an example in cases where a species was declared "at risk" for extinction even though population numbers are high.[141]

Naturalist Aldo Leopold paid tribute to the vanished species in a monument dedication held by the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology at Wyalusing State Park, Wisconsin, which had been one of the species' social roost sites.[163] Speaking on May 11, 1947, Leopold remarked:

Men still live who, in their youth, remember pigeons. Trees still live who, in their youth, were shaken by a living wind. But a decade hence only the oldest oaks will remember, and at long last only the hills will know.[164]

Potential resurrection of the species edit

 
Taxidermied male and female, Laval University Library

Today, at least 1,532 passenger pigeon skins (along with 16 skeletons) are in existence, spread across many institutions all over the world.[36][37] It has been suggested that the passenger pigeon should be revived when available technology allows it (a concept which has been termed "de-extinction"), using genetic material from such specimens. In 2003, the Pyrenean ibex (Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica, a subspecies of the Spanish ibex) was the first extinct animal to be cloned back to life; the clone lived for only seven minutes before dying of lung defects.[165][166] A hindrance to cloning the passenger pigeon is the fact that the DNA of museum specimens has been contaminated and fragmented, due to exposure to heat and oxygen. American geneticist George M. Church has proposed that the passenger pigeon genome can be reconstructed by piecing together DNA fragments from different specimens. The next step would be to splice these genes into the stem cells of rock pigeons (or band-tailed pigeons), which would then be transformed into egg and sperm cells, and placed into the eggs of rock pigeons, resulting in rock pigeons bearing passenger pigeon sperm and eggs. The offspring of these would have passenger pigeon traits, and would be further bred to favor unique features of the extinct species.[165][167][168] The idea is currently being pursued by American non-profit organization Revive & Restore.[169]

The general idea of re-creating extinct species has been criticized, since the large funds needed could be spent on conserving currently threatened species and habitats, and because conservation efforts might be viewed as less urgent. In the case of the passenger pigeon, since it was very social, it is unlikely that enough birds could be created for revival to be successful, and it is unclear whether there is enough appropriate habitat left for its reintroduction. Furthermore, the parent pigeons that would raise the cloned passenger pigeons would belong to a different species, with a different way of rearing young.[165][167]

Bibliography edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ John Herald, a bluegrass singer, wrote a song dedicated to the extinction of the species and Martha, the species' endling, that he titled "Martha (Last of the Passenger Pigeons)".[104][105] In connection with the centennial of Martha's death, the song was cited as evidence of her iconic stature—a symbol of the wanton slaughter of these pigeons and the human-caused extinction of the species.[106][107]

References edit

  1. ^ "†Ectopistes Swainson 1827 (passenger pigeon)". PBDB.
  2. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2019). "Ectopistes migratorius". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T22690733A152593137. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T22690733A152593137.en. Retrieved November 19, 2021.
  3. ^ "Ectopistes migratorius. NatureServe Explorer 2.0". explorer.natureserve.org. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  4. ^ Henninger, W. F. (1902). "A Preliminary List of the Birds of Middle Southern Ohio". The Wilson Bulletin. 14 (3): 77–93. ISSN 0043-5643. JSTOR 4153807.
  5. ^ Catesby, M. (1729). Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands. Vol. 1. London: W. Innys and R. Manby. p. 23.
  6. ^ Aldrich, J. W. (1993). "Classification and Distribution". In Baskett, T.S.; Sayre, M.W.; Tomlinson, R.E.; Mirarchi, R.E. (eds.). Ecology and management of the Mourning Dove. Harrisburg, PA: Stackpole Books. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-8117-1940-7.
  7. ^ a b Hemming, F. (1952). "Proposed use of the plenary powers to secure that the name Columba migratoria Linnaeus, 1766, shall be the oldest available name for the Passenger Pigeon, the type species of the genus Ectopistes Swainson, 1827". Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 9: 80–84. doi:10.5962/bhl.part.10238.
  8. ^ a b Oberholser, H. C. (1918). "The scientific name of the Passenger Pigeon". Science. 48 (1244): 445. Bibcode:1918Sci....48..445O. doi:10.1126/science.48.1244.445. PMID 17752099. S2CID 28529631.
  9. ^ Swainson, W. J. (1827). "Mr. Swainson on several new groups in Ornithology". The Zoological Journal. 3: 362.
  10. ^ Bangs, O. (1906). "The names of the passenger pigeon and the mourning dove". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 19: 43–44.
  11. ^ Schenk, E. T.; McMasters, J. H. (1956). Procedure in Taxonomy (Third ed.). Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-8047-3867-5.
  12. ^ Ray, Clayton E.; Bohaska, David J. (2001). "Miocene and Pliocene birds from the Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina in Geology and Paleontology of the Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, III". Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology. 90 (90): 299–300. doi:10.5479/si.00810266.90.1. hdl:10088/2006.
  13. ^ a b Blockstein 2002, p. 4
  14. ^ Miller, W. J. (January 16, 1969). . Should Doves be Hunted in Iowa?. Ames, IA: Ames Audubon Society. Archived from the original on September 20, 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  15. ^ Brewer, T. M. (1840). Wilson's American Ornithology: with Notes by Jardine; to which is Added a Synopsis of American Birds, Including those Described by Bonaparte, Audubon, Nuttall, and Richardson. Boston: Otis, Broaders, and Company. p. 717.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Hume, J. P.; Walters, M. (2012). Extinct Birds. London: T & AD Poyser. pp. 144–146. ISBN 978-1-4081-5725-1.
  17. ^ Shapiro, B.; Sibthorpe, D.; Rambaut, A.; Austin, J.; Wragg, G. M.; Bininda-Emonds, O. R. P.; Lee, P. L. M.; Cooper, A. (2002). "Flight of the Dodo" (PDF). Science. 295 (5560): 1683. doi:10.1126/science.295.5560.1683. PMID 11872833.
  18. ^ a b c Fulton, T. L.; Wagner, S. M.; Fisher, C.; Shapiro, B. (2012). "Nuclear DNA from the Extinct Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius) Confirms a Single Origin of New World Pigeons". Annals of Anatomy. 194 (1): 52–7. doi:10.1016/j.aanat.2011.02.017. PMID 21482085.
  19. ^ a b c Johnson, K. P.; Clayton, D. H.; Dumbacher, J. P.; Fleischer, R. C. (2010). "The flight of the Passenger Pigeon: phylogenetics and biogeographic history of an extinct species". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 57 (1): 455–8. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2010.05.010. PMID 20478386.
  20. ^ Fulton, T. L.; Wagner, S. M.; Shapiro, B. (2012). "Case Study: Recovery of Ancient Nuclear DNA from Toe Pads of the Extinct Passenger Pigeon". Ancient DNA. Methods in Molecular Biology. Vol. 840. pp. 29–35. doi:10.1007/978-1-61779-516-9_4. ISBN 978-1-61779-515-2. PMID 22237518.
  21. ^ Hung, C. M.; Lin, R. C.; Chu, J. H.; Yeh, C. F.; Yao, C. J.; Li, S. H. (2013). "The De Novo Assembly of Mitochondrial Genomes of the Extinct Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius) with Next Generation Sequencing". PLOS One. 8 (2): e56301. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...856301H. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0056301. PMC 3577829. PMID 23437111.
  22. ^ Deane, R. (1908). "The Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius) in Confinement". The Auk. 25 (2): 181–183. doi:10.2307/4070695. JSTOR 4070695.
  23. ^ Atkinson, G. E. (1907). Mershon, W. B (ed.). The Passenger Pigeon. New York: The Outing Publishing Co. p. 188.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Fuller, E. (2014). The Passenger Pigeon. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16295-9. pp. 30-47.
  25. ^ Harper, D. (2012). "Passenger (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  26. ^ Schorger, A. W. (1955). The Passenger Pigeon: Its Natural History and Extinction. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-1-930665-96-5. p. 251.
  27. ^ Schorger 1955, pp. 252–253
  28. ^ Tatum, J.; Rementer, J.; the Culture Preservation Committee (2010). . Culture and History of the Delaware Tribe. Delaware Tribe of Indians. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  29. ^ "Omiimii". Ojibwe People's Dictionary. Department of American Indian Studies, University of Minnesota. Retrieved March 2, 2012.
  30. ^ Costa, D. J. (2005). Wolfart, H. C. (ed.). (PDF). Papers of the 36th Algonquian Conference. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba. pp. 107–133. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 11, 2016. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  31. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 255
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fuller 2014, pp. 72–88
  33. ^ Fuller 2014, pp. 150–161
  34. ^ a b c d Blockstein 2002, p. 2
  35. ^ a b c d e f Gibbs, D.; Barnes, E.; Cox, J. (2001). Pigeons and Doves: A Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World. Sussex: Pica Press. pp. 318–319. ISBN 978-1-873403-60-0.
  36. ^ a b c d Greenway, J. C. (1967). Extinct and Vanishing Birds of the World. New York: American Committee for International Wild Life Protection 13. pp. 304–311. ISBN 978-0-486-21869-4.
  37. ^ a b Hume, J. P.; van Grouw, H. (2014). "Colour aberrations in extinct and endangered birds". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 134: 168–193.
  38. ^ a b c d e Department of Vertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History (March 2001). . Encyclopedia Smithsonian. Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on March 13, 2012. Retrieved April 22, 2013.
  39. ^ a b Fuller 2014, pp. 162–168
  40. ^ Shufeldt, R. W. (1914). "Osteology of the Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius)". The Auk. 31 (3): 358–362. doi:10.2307/4071953. JSTOR 4071953.
  41. ^ a b c Shufeldt, R. W. (1915). "Anatomical and other notes on the Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius) lately living in the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens". The Auk. 32 (1): 29–41. doi:10.2307/4071611. JSTOR 4071611.
  42. ^ a b c d Blockstein 2002, p. 8
  43. ^ a b c d e Fuller, E. (2001). Extinct Birds (Revised ed.). Ithaca, New York: Comstock Publishing Associates. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-0-8014-3954-4.
  44. ^ a b c Craig, W. (1911). "The expressions of emotion in the pigeons. III. The Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius Linn.)". The Auk. 4. 28 (4): 408–427. doi:10.2307/4071160. JSTOR 4071160.
  45. ^ a b c d Blockstein 2002, p. 3
  46. ^ a b c Blockstein 2002, p. 5
  47. ^ a b c d e Blockstein 2002, p. 6
  48. ^ Howard, H. (1937). "A Pleistocene Record of the Passenger Pigeon in California". Condor. 39 (1): 12–14. doi:10.2307/1363481. JSTOR 1363481.
  49. ^ Chandler, R. M. (1982). "A Second Pleistocene Passenger Pigeon from California" (PDF). Condor. 84 (2): 242. doi:10.2307/1367681. JSTOR 1367681.
  50. ^ a b c Audubon, J. J. (1835). Ornithological biography, or, an account of the Habits of the Birds of the United States of America. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: A. Black. pp. 319–327.
  51. ^ a b c d e f Blockstein, D. E. (2002). "Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius". In Poole, A.; Gill, F. (eds.). The Birds of North America. Philadelphia: The Birds of North America, Inc., Cornell Lab of Ornithology. p. 611. Retrieved March 3, 2016. p. 9.
  52. ^ a b c d e f Blockstein 2002, p. 10
  53. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 205
  54. ^ a b c d e f Ellsworth, J. W.; McComb, B. C. (2003). "Potential Effects of Passenger Pigeon Flocks on the Structure and Composition of Presettlement Forests of Eastern North America". Conservation Biology. 17 (6): 1548–1558. doi:10.1111/j.1523-1739.2003.00230.x. S2CID 55427679.
  55. ^ "General Notes: Thoreau's Notes on the Passenger Pigeon". The Auk. 28 (1): 111. 1911.
  56. ^ Sullivan, J.; Sutton, B.; Cronon, W. (April 2004). "The Passenger Pigeon: Once There Were Billions". Hunting for Frogs on Elston, and Other Tales from Field & Street. Chicago, Illinois. pp. 210–213. ISBN 978-0-226-77993-5. Retrieved February 29, 2012.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Fuller 2014, pp. 50–69
  58. ^ a b c d e Hung, C. M.; Shaner, P. J. L.; et al. (2014). "Drastic population fluctuations explain the rapid extinction of the passenger pigeon". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111 (29): 10636–10641. Bibcode:2014PNAS..11110636H. doi:10.1073/pnas.1401526111. PMC 4115547. PMID 24979776.
  59. ^ Williams, S. C. P. (2014). "Humans not solely to blame for passenger pigeon extinction". Science & AAAS. American Association for the Advancement of Science. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  60. ^ Mann, Charles C. (2011). "The Artificial Wilderness". 1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus (2nd ed.). New York: Vintage. pp. 365–367.
  61. ^ a b c d Murray, G. G. R.; Soares, A. E. R.; et al. (2017). "Natural selection shaped the rise and fall of passenger pigeon genomic diversity" (PDF). Science. 358 (6365): 951–954. Bibcode:2017Sci...358..951M. doi:10.1126/science.aao0960. hdl:11250/2480523. PMID 29146814. S2CID 4779202.
  62. ^ a b Pennisi, Elizabeth (November 16, 2017). "Four billion passenger pigeons vanished. Their large population may have been what did them in". Science & AAAS. American Association for the Advancement of Science. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  63. ^ SciShow (July 2, 2018), Why Billions of Passenger Pigeons Died in Under a Century, archived from the original on December 11, 2021, retrieved February 15, 2019
  64. ^ Achenbach, Joel (November 16, 2017). "Billions or bust: New genetic clues to the extinction of the passenger pigeon". The Washington Post.
  65. ^ Atkinson, Q. D.; Gray, R. D.; Drummond, A. J. (2008). "mtDNA variation predicts population size in humans and reveals a major southern Asian chapter in human prehistory". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 25 (2): 468–474. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm277. PMID 18093996.
  66. ^ Biraben, J. N. (1979). "Essai sur l'évolution du nombre des hommes" [Essay on the evolution of numbers of mankind]. Population. French Edition. 34 (1): 13–25. doi:10.2307/1531855. JSTOR 1531855.
  67. ^ Sackton, Timothy B.; Hartl, Daniel L.; Corbett-Detig, Russell B. (April 10, 2015). "Natural selection constrains neutral diversity across a wide range of species". PLOS Biology. 13 (4): e1002112. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1002112. PMC 4393120. PMID 25859758.
  68. ^ Przeworski, Molly; Andolfatto, Peter; Venkat, Aarti; Ségurel, Laure; Meyer, Wynn K.; Matute, Daniel R.; Bullaughey, Kevin; Leffler, Ellen M. (September 11, 2012). "Revisiting an old riddle: what determines genetic diversity levels within species?". PLOS Biology. 10 (9): e1001388. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1001388. PMC 3439417. PMID 22984349.
  69. ^ a b c d e f Blockstein 2002, p. 15
  70. ^ a b Novak, B. J.; Estes, J. A.; Shaw, H. E.; Novak, E. V.; Shapiro, B. (2018). "Experimental investigation of the dietary ecology of the extinct passenger pigeon, Ectopistes migratorius". Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 6. doi:10.3389/fevo.2018.00020.
  71. ^ McCauley, D. J.; Hardesty-Moore, M.; et al. (2016). "A mammoth undertaking: harnessing insight from functional ecology to shape de-extinction priority setting" (PDF). Functional Ecology. 31 (5): 1008–1009. doi:10.1111/1365-2435.12728. S2CID 19791653.
  72. ^ Hutchinson, Todd F.; Yaussy, Daniel A.; Long, Robert P.; Rebbeck, Joanne; Sutherland, Elaine Kennedy (December 2012). "Long-term (13-year) effects of repeated prescribed fires on stand structure and tree regeneration in mixed-oak forests". Forest Ecology and Management. 286: 87–100. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2012.08.036. ISSN 0378-1127.
  73. ^ Buchanan, M. L.; Hart, J. L. (2012). "Canopy disturbance history of old-growth Quercus alba sites in the eastern United States: Examination of long-term trends and broad-scale patterns". Forest Ecology and Management. 267 (267): 28–39. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2011.11.034.
  74. ^ Ostfeld, Richard S.; Jones, Clive G.; Wolff, Jerry O. (1996). "Of Mice and Mast". BioScience. 46 (5): 323. doi:10.2307/1312946. JSTOR 1312946. S2CID 89496723.
  75. ^ Blockstein, D. E. (1998). "Lyme Disease and the Passenger Pigeon?". Science. 279 (5358): 1831c–1831. Bibcode:1998Sci...279.1831B. doi:10.1126/science.279.5358.1831c. PMID 9537894. S2CID 45065236.
  76. ^ Ceballos, G.; Ehrlich, A. H.; Ehrlich, P. R. (2015). The Annihilation of Nature: Human Extinction of Birds and Mammals. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 33–35. ISBN 978-1-4214-1718-9 – via Open Edition.
  77. ^ a b c Blockstein 2002, p. 7
  78. ^ Neumann, T. W. (1985). "Human-wildlife competition and the passenger pigeon: Population growth from system destabilization". Human Ecology. 13 (4): 389–410. doi:10.1007/BF01531152. S2CID 153426755.
  79. ^ a b c d Blockstein 2002, p. 11
  80. ^ a b Blockstein 2002, p. 12
  81. ^ a b c d Blockstein 2002, p. 13
  82. ^ a b c Blockstein 2002, p. 14
  83. ^ Darwin, Charles; Wallace, Alfred Russel (1858), "On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection", Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 3 (9): 46–62, doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1858.tb02500.x, retrieved January 14, 2007
  84. ^ Clayton, D. H.; Price, R. D. (1999). (PDF). Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 92 (5): 675–685. doi:10.1093/aesa/92.5.675. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 25, 2012. Retrieved December 3, 2011.
  85. ^ a b Price, R. D.; Clayton, D. H.; Adams, R. J. (2000). (PDF). Journal of Parasitology. 86 (5): 948–950. doi:10.2307/3284803. JSTOR 3284803. PMID 11128516. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 10, 2010. Retrieved December 3, 2011.
  86. ^ a b Greenberg 2014, pp. 31–35
  87. ^ Goodyear, Albert C. (2005), "Evidence of Pre-Clovis Sites in the Eastern United States", Paleoamerican Origins: Beyond Clovis: 103–112
  88. ^ Novak, Ben J. (2016), "Deciphering The Ecological Impact of the Passenger Pigeon: A Synthesis of Paleogenetics, Paleoecology, Morphology, and Physiology" (PDF), UC Santa Cruz, pp. 10–11
  89. ^ Abrams, Marc D.; Nowacki, Gregory J. (2008), "Native Americans as active and passive promoters of mast and fruit trees in the eastern USA", The Holocene, 18 (7): 1123–1137, Bibcode:2008Holoc..18.1123A, doi:10.1177/0959683608095581, S2CID 128836416
  90. ^ Delcourt, Paul A.; Delcourt, Hazel R. (2004), Prehistoric Native Americans and Ecological Change: Human Ecosystems in Eastern North America Since the Pleistocene, Cambridge Studies in Ecology (1st ed.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-66270-3
  91. ^ Little, Silas (1974). "7. Effects on Forests: Northeastern United States – I. Frequency and Type of Presettlement Fires". In Kozlowski, T. T.; Ahlgren, C. E. (eds.). Fire and Ecosystems. New York: Academic Press. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-12-424255-5.
  92. ^ Thompson, D. Q. & Smith, R. H. (1971), "The forest primeval in the northeast -- a great myth?" (PDF), Proceedings Annual [10th] Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference: a quest for ecological understanding. Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada., Tallahassee, FL: Tall Timbers Research, pp. 261–265
  93. ^ Greenberg 2014, p. 34
  94. ^ Llamas, B.; Fehren-Schmitz, L.; et al. (2016), "Ancient mitochondrial DNA provides high-resolution time scale of the peopling of the Americas", Science Advances, 2 (4): 1–10, Bibcode:2016SciA....2E1385L, doi:10.1126/sciadv.1501385, PMC 4820370, PMID 27051878
  95. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 135
  96. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 136
  97. ^ Edey, M. (December 22, 1961). "Once there were billions, now there are none". Life. Vol. 51, no. 25. pp. 169–176. ISSN 0024-3019. Retrieved June 16, 2015.
  98. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 12
  99. ^ Schorger 1955, pp. 132–133
  100. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 132
  101. ^ a b Fuller 2014, pp. 124–147
  102. ^ Shufeldt, R. W. (1921). "Published figures and plates of the extinct passenger pigeon". Scientific Monthly (5th ed.). 12 (5): 458–481. Bibcode:1921SciMo..12..458S.
  103. ^ Milner, R. (2012). Charles R. Knight: The Artist Who Saw Through Time. New York: Abrams Books. p. 138. ISBN 978-0-8109-8479-0.
  104. ^ Herald, J. "Lyrics to "Martha (Last of the Passenger Pigeons)"". Johnherald.com. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  105. ^ Gebhart, Parrish (October 17, 2010). "Martha: Last of the Passenger Pigeons" (video). YouTube. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved December 12, 2013.
  106. ^ Harvey, C.; Newbern, E. (August 29, 2014). "13 Memories of Martha, the Last Passenger Pigeon". Audubon Magazine. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  107. ^ McLendon, R. (September 1, 2011). "Ode to Martha, the last passenger pigeon". Mother Nature Network. Retrieved March 3, 2016. One of eastern North America's most iconic animals vanished forever on Sept. 1, 1914. Now, 97 years later, the passenger pigeon has become an icon for something else: manmade extinction.
  108. ^ Kyne, P. M.; Adams, V. M. (2016). "Extinct flagships: linking extinct and threatened species". Oryx. 51 (3): 471–476. doi:10.1017/S0030605316000041.
  109. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 129
  110. ^ Schorger 1955, pp. 133–134
  111. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 137
  112. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 139
  113. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 168
  114. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 134
  115. ^ Laudonnière, René de Goulaine de (1853). L'histoire notable de la Floride située ès Indes Occidentales: contenant les trois voyages faits en icelle par certains Capitaines et Pilotes françois. Paris: Chez P. Jannet. p. 136.
  116. ^ MacNamara, Charles. Miller, G.A. (ed.). "Champlain as a Naturalist". The Canadian Field-Naturalist. Vol. XL, no. 6. Ottawa: Graphic Publishers. p. 127.
  117. ^ McCarthy, Kevin M. (1994). Twenty Florida Pirates. Sarasota, FL: Pineapple Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-56164-050-8. its leader, Rene de Laudonniere, had been there 200 soldiers without relief over a year, since June 1564..
  118. ^ Mann, C. C. (2005). "The Artificial Wilderness". 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 315–318. ISBN 978-1-4000-4006-3.
  119. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 130
  120. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 131
  121. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 144
  122. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 186
  123. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 193
  124. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 192
  125. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 198
  126. ^ a b c d e Hume, J. P. (2015). "Large-scale live capture of Passenger Pigeons Ectopistes migratorius for sporting purposes: overlooked illustrated documentation". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 2. 135: 174–184.
  127. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 169
  128. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 172
  129. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 170
  130. ^ Schorger 1955, pp. 177–179
  131. ^ Paxson, H. D. (1917). "The last of the Wild Pigeon in Bucks County". Collection of Papers Read Before the Bucks County Historical Society. 4: 367–382.
  132. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 173
  133. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 141
  134. ^ a b Yeoman, B. (2014). . Audubon Magazine. Archived from the original on January 21, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  135. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 142
  136. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 167
  137. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 145
  138. ^ a b Ehrlich, P. R.; Dobkin, D. S.; Wheye, D. (1988). "The Passenger Pigeon". Stanford University. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
  139. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 146
  140. ^ Whaples, R. (2015). "A Feathered River Across the Sky: The Passenger Pigeon's Flight to Extinction". The Independent Review. 19 (3): 443–6.
  141. ^ a b Jackson, J. A.; Jackson, B. (2007). "Extinction: the Passenger Pigeon, last hopes, letting go". The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 119 (4): 767–772. doi:10.1676/1559-4491(2007)119[767:etpplh]2.0.co;2. JSTOR 20456089. S2CID 85830808.
  142. ^ Hornaday, W. T. (1913). Our Vanishing Wild Life. Its Extermination and Preservation. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. Retrieved February 29, 2012. at Project Gutenberg.
  143. ^ Greenberg, Joel (2014). A Feathered River Across the Sky: The Passenger Pigeon's Flight to Extinction. New York: Bloomsbury USA. ISBN 978-1-62040-534-5.
  144. ^ Reeve, S. (March 2001). "Going Down in History". Geographical. 73 (3): 60–64. ISSN 0016-741X.
  145. ^ Wetmore, A. (October 1936). "Game Birds of Prairie, Forest and Tundra". National Geographic. p. 495.
  146. ^ McKinley, D. (1960). "A History of the Passenger Pigeon in Missouri". Auk. 77 (4): 399–420. doi:10.2307/4082414. JSTOR 4082414.
  147. ^ "Theodore Roosevelt Signed Archive Passenger Pigeons | Raab Collection". The Raab Collection. Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  148. ^ "TR Center - ImageViewer". www.theodorerooseveltcenter.org. Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  149. ^ Stukel, E. D. (January–February 2005). "Passenger Pigeon". South Dakota Game Fish & Parks. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
  150. ^ "Reward for Wild Pigeons. Ornithologists Offer $3,000 for the Discovery of Their Nests" (PDF). The New York Times. Boston, Massachusetts. April 4, 1910. Retrieved February 29, 2012.
  151. ^ a b c d e f g Fuller 2014, pp. 92–121
  152. ^ Rothschild, W. (1907). Extinct Birds. London: Hutchinson & Co. pp. 167–170.
  153. ^ a b Schorger 1955, p. 28
  154. ^ D'Elia, J. (2010). "Evolution of Avian Conservation Breeding with Insights for Addressing the Current Extinction Crisis". Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management. 1 (2): 189–210. doi:10.3996/062010-JFWM-017.
  155. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 27
  156. ^ Shell, H. R. (May 2004). "The Face of Extinction". Natural History. 113 (4): 72. ISSN 0028-0712.
  157. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 29
  158. ^ Schorger 1955, p. 30
  159. ^ "Last Passenger Pigeon Dies". El Paso Morning Times. El Paso, Texas. September 14, 1914. p. 6.
  160. ^ "Martha – Passenger Pigeon Memorial Hut". Roadside America. Cincinnati, Ohio. Retrieved February 29, 2012.
  161. ^ Halliday, T. (1980). "The extinction of the passenger pigeon Ectopistes migratorius and its relevance to contemporary conservation". Biological Conservation. 17 (2): 157–162. doi:10.1016/0006-3207(80)90046-4.
  162. ^ "Passenger Pigeon/Allee effect". kevintshoemaker.github.io. Retrieved September 25, 2020.
  163. ^ "Passenger Pigeon Monument". Wisconsin Historical Society. December 2003. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
  164. ^ Leopold, Aldo (1989) [1949]. A Sand County Almanac: And Sketches Here and There. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 109. ISBN 0-19-505928-X.
  165. ^ a b c Lewis, T. (2013). "How to bring extinct animals back to life". NBC News. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
  166. ^ "'Bringing Back the Passenger Pigeon' Meeting convened at Harvard Medical School in Boston". Long Now Foundation. February 7, 2013. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  167. ^ a b Zimmer, C. (2013). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on December 12, 2016. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  168. ^ Landers, J. (2013). "Scientists look to revive the long-extinct passenger pigeon". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 6, 2014.
  169. ^ "The Great Passenger Pigeon Comeback". Retrieved August 10, 2023.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ectopistes migratorius at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Ectopistes migratorius at Wikispecies
  • Project Passenger Pigeon: Lessons from the Past for a Sustainable Future
  • The Demise of the Passenger Pigeon (as broadcast on National Public Radio's Day to Day)
  • 360 Degree View of Martha, the Last Passenger Pigeon (Smithsonian Institution)

passenger, pigeon, 2010, mumblecore, film, passenger, pigeons, film, passenger, pigeon, wild, pigeon, ectopistes, migratorius, extinct, species, pigeon, that, endemic, north, america, common, name, derived, from, french, word, passager, meaning, passing, migra. For the 2010 mumblecore film see Passenger Pigeons film The passenger pigeon or wild pigeon Ectopistes migratorius is an extinct species of pigeon that was endemic to North America Its common name is derived from the French word passager meaning passing by due to the migratory habits of the species The scientific name also refers to its migratory characteristics The morphologically similar mourning dove Zenaida macroura was long thought to be its closest relative and the two were at times confused but genetic analysis has shown that the genus Patagioenas is more closely related to it than the Zenaida doves Passenger pigeonTemporal range 5 33 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Zanclean Holocene 1 Live female in 1896 98 kept in the aviary of C O WhitmanConservation statusExtinct 1914 IUCN 3 1 2 Presumed Extinct 1914 NatureServe 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder ColumbiformesFamily ColumbidaeGenus EctopistesSwainson 1827Species E migratoriusBinomial name Ectopistes migratorius Linnaeus 1766 Distribution map with former range in orange and breeding zone in redSynonymsColumba migratoria Linnaeus 1766 Columba canadensis Linnaeus 1766 Ectopistes migratoria Swainson 1827The passenger pigeon was sexually dimorphic in size and coloration The male was 390 to 410 mm 15 4 to 16 1 in in length mainly gray on the upperparts lighter on the underparts with iridescent bronze feathers on the neck and black spots on the wings The female was 380 to 400 mm 15 0 to 15 7 in and was duller and browner than the male overall The juvenile was similar to the female but without iridescence It mainly inhabited the deciduous forests of eastern North America and was also recorded elsewhere but bred primarily around the Great Lakes The pigeon migrated in enormous flocks constantly searching for food shelter and breeding grounds and was once the most abundant bird in North America numbering around 3 billion and possibly up to 5 billion A very fast flyer the passenger pigeon could reach a speed of 100 km h 62 mph The bird fed mainly on mast and also fruits and invertebrates It practiced communal roosting and communal breeding and its extreme gregariousness may be linked with searching for food and predator satiation Passenger pigeons were hunted by Native Americans but hunting intensified after the arrival of Europeans particularly in the 19th century Pigeon meat was commercialized as cheap food resulting in hunting on a massive scale for many decades There were several other factors contributing to the decline and subsequent extinction of the species including shrinking of the large breeding populations necessary for preservation of the species and widespread deforestation which destroyed its habitat A slow decline between about 1800 and 1870 was followed by a rapid decline between 1870 and 1890 In 1900 the last confirmed wild bird was shot in southern Ohio 2 4 The last captive birds were divided in three groups around the turn of the 20th century some of which were photographed alive Martha thought to be the last passenger pigeon died on September 1 1914 at the Cincinnati Zoo The eradication of the species is a notable example of anthropogenic extinction Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Evolution 1 2 Etymology 2 Description 2 1 Vocalizations 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology and behavior 4 1 Diet 4 2 Reproduction 4 3 Predators and parasites 5 Relationship with humans 5 1 Hunting 5 2 Decline and conservation attempts 5 3 Last survivors 5 4 Extinction causes 5 5 Potential resurrection of the species 6 Bibliography 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 7 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp Earliest published illustration of the species a male Mark Catesby 1731Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus coined the binomial name Columba macroura for both the mourning dove and the passenger pigeon in the 1758 edition of his work Systema Naturae the starting point of biological nomenclature wherein he appears to have considered the two identical This composite description cited accounts of these birds in two pre Linnean books One of these was Mark Catesby s description of the passenger pigeon which was published in his 1731 to 1743 work Natural History of Carolina Florida and the Bahama Islands which referred to this bird as Palumbus migratorius and was accompanied by the earliest published illustration of the species Catesby s description was combined with the 1743 description of the mourning dove by George Edwards who used the name C macroura for that bird There is nothing to suggest Linnaeus ever saw specimens of these birds himself and his description is thought to be fully derivative of these earlier accounts and their illustrations In his 1766 edition of Systema Naturae Linnaeus dropped the name C macroura and instead used the name C migratoria for the passenger pigeon and C carolinensis for the mourning dove 5 6 7 In the same edition Linnaeus also named C canadensis based on Turtur canadensis as used by Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760 Brisson s description was later shown to have been based on a female passenger pigeon 8 In 1827 William John Swainson moved the passenger pigeon from the genus Columba to the new monotypic genus Ectopistes due in part to the length of the wings and the wedge shape of the tail 9 In 1906 Outram Bangs suggested that because Linnaeus had wholly copied Catesby s text when coining C macroura this name should apply to the passenger pigeon as E macroura 10 In 1918 Harry C Oberholser suggested that C canadensis should take precedence over C migratoria as E canadensis as it appeared on an earlier page in Linnaeus book 8 In 1952 Francis Hemming proposed that the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature ICZN secure the specific name macroura for the mourning dove and the name migratorius for the passenger pigeon since this was the intended use by the authors on whose work Linnaeus had based his description 7 This was accepted by the ICZN which used its plenary powers to designate the species for the respective names in 1955 11 Evolution edit nbsp Mounted male passenger pigeon Field Museum of Natural History nbsp Band tailed pigeon a species in the related genus Patagioenas nbsp The physically similar mourning dove is not closely related The passenger pigeon was a member of the pigeon and dove family Columbidae The oldest known fossil of the genus is an isolated humerus USNM 430960 known from the Lee Creek Mine in North Carolina in sediments belonging to the Yorktown Formation dating to the Zanclean stage of the Pliocene between 5 3 and 3 6 million years ago 12 Its closest living relatives were long thought to be the Zenaida doves based on morphological grounds particularly the physically similar mourning dove now Z macroura 13 14 It was even suggested that the mourning dove belonged to the genus Ectopistes and was listed as E carolinensis by some authors including Thomas Mayo Brewer 15 The passenger pigeon was supposedly descended from Zenaida pigeons that had adapted to the woodlands on the plains of central North America 16 The passenger pigeon differed from the species in the genus Zenaida in being larger lacking a facial stripe being sexually dimorphic and having iridescent neck feathers and a smaller clutch In a 2002 study by American geneticist Beth Shapiro et al museum specimens of the passenger pigeon were included in an ancient DNA analysis for the first time in a paper focusing mainly on the dodo and it was found to be the sister taxon of the cuckoo dove genus Macropygia The Zenaida doves were instead shown to be related to the quail doves of the genus Geotrygon and the Leptotila doves 17 18 19 A more extensive 2010 study instead showed that the passenger pigeon was most closely related to the New World Patagioenas pigeons including the band tailed pigeon P fasciata of western North America which are related to the Southeast Asian species in the genera Turacoena Macropygia and Reinwardtoena This clade is also related to the Columba and Streptopelia doves of the Old World collectively termed the typical pigeons and doves The authors of the study suggested that the ancestors of the passenger pigeon may have colonized the New World from South East Asia by flying across the Pacific Ocean or perhaps across Beringia in the north 19 In a 2012 study the nuclear DNA of the passenger pigeon was analyzed for the first time and its relationship with the Patagioenas pigeon was confirmed In contrast to the 2010 study these authors suggested that their results could indicate that the ancestors of the passenger pigeon and its Old World relatives may have originated in the Neotropical region of the New World 18 The cladogram below follows the 2012 DNA study showing the position of the passenger pigeon among its closest relatives 18 Macropygia cuckoo doves ReinwardtoenaTuracoenaColumba Old World pigeons Streptopelia turtle doves and collared doves Patagioenas New World pigeons Ectopistes passenger pigeon DNA in old museum specimens is often degraded and fragmentary and passenger pigeon specimens have been used in various studies to discover improved methods of analyzing and assembling genomes from such material DNA samples are often taken from the toe pads of bird skins in museums as this can be done without causing significant damage to valuable specimens 20 21 The passenger pigeon had no known subspecies 13 Hybridization occurred between the passenger pigeon and the Barbary dove Streptopelia risoria in the aviary of Charles Otis Whitman who owned many of the last captive birds around the turn of the 20th century and kept them with other pigeon species but the offspring were infertile 16 22 Etymology edit The genus name Ectopistes translates as moving about or wandering while the specific name migratorius indicates its migratory habits 23 The full binomial can thus be translated as migratory wanderer The English common name passenger pigeon derives from the French word passager which means to pass by in a fleeting manner 24 25 While the pigeon was extant the name passenger pigeon was used interchangeably with wild pigeon 26 The bird also gained some less frequently used names including blue pigeon merne rouck pigeon wandering long tailed dove and wood pigeon In the 18th century the passenger pigeon was known as tourte in New France in modern Canada but to the French in Europe it was known as tourtre In modern French the bird is known as tourte voyageuse or pigeon migrateur among other names 27 In the Native American Algonquian languages the pigeon was called amimi by the Lenape omiimii by the Ojibwe and mimia by the Kaskaskia Illinois 28 29 30 Other names in indigenous American languages include ori te in Mohawk and putchee nashoba or lost dove in Choctaw 31 The Seneca people called the pigeon jahgowa meaning big bread as it was a source of food for their tribes 32 Chief Simon Pokagon of the Potawatomi stated that his people called the pigeon O me me wog and that the Europeans did not adopt native names for the bird as it reminded them of their domesticated pigeons instead calling them wild pigeons as they called the native peoples wild men 33 Description edit source source source source source Turnaround video of an adult male specimen at Naturalis Biodiversity CenterThe passenger pigeon was sexually dimorphic in size and coloration It weighed between 260 and 340 g 9 2 and 12 0 oz 34 The adult male was about 390 to 410 mm 15 4 to 16 1 in in length 35 It had a bluish gray head nape and hindneck On the sides of the neck and the upper mantle were iridescent display feathers that have variously been described as being a bright bronze violet or golden green depending on the angle of the light The upper back and wings were a pale or slate gray tinged with olive brown that turned into grayish brown on the lower wings The lower back and rump were a dark blue gray that became grayish brown on the upper tail covert feathers The greater and median wing covert feathers were pale gray with a small number of irregular black spots near the end The primary and secondary feathers of the wing were a blackish brown with a narrow white edge on the outer side of the secondaries The two central tail feathers were brownish gray and the rest were white 24 35 The tail pattern was distinctive as it had white outer edges with blackish spots that were prominently displayed in flight 35 The lower throat and breast were richly pinkish rufous grading into a paler pink further down and into white on the abdomen and undertail covert feathers The undertail coverts also had a few black spots The bill was black while the feet and legs were a bright coral red It had a carmine red iris surrounded by a narrow purplish red eye ring 35 The wing of the male measured 196 to 215 mm 7 7 to 8 5 in the tail 175 to 210 mm 6 9 to 8 3 in the bill 15 to 18 mm 0 59 to 0 71 in and the tarsus was 26 to 28 mm 1 0 to 1 1 in 24 source source source source source Turnaround video of an adult female specimen at NaturalisThe adult female passenger pigeon was slightly smaller than the male at 380 to 400 mm 15 0 to 15 7 in in length It was duller than the male overall and was a grayish brown on the forehead crown and nape down to the scapulars and the feathers on the sides of the neck had less iridescence than those of the male The lower throat and breast were a buff gray that developed into white on the belly and undertail coverts It was browner on the upperparts and paler buff brown and less rufous on the underparts than the male The wings back and tail were similar in appearance to those of the male except that the outer edges of the primary feathers were edged in buff or rufous buff 24 35 The wings had more spotting than those of the male 34 The tail was shorter than that of the male and the legs and feet were a paler red The iris was orange red with a grayish blue naked orbital ring The wing of the female was 180 to 210 mm 7 1 to 8 3 in the tail 150 to 200 mm 5 9 to 7 9 in the bill 15 to 18 mm 0 59 to 0 71 in and the tarsus was 25 to 28 mm 0 98 to 1 10 in 24 source source source source source Turnaround video of a juvenile female specimen at NaturalisThe juvenile passenger pigeon was similar in plumage to the adult female but lacked the spotting on the wings and was a darker brownish gray on the head neck and breast The feathers on the wings had pale gray fringes also described as white tips giving it a scaled look The secondaries were brownish black with pale edges and the tertial feathers had a rufous wash The primaries were also edged with a rufous brown color The neck feathers had no iridescence The legs and feet were dull red and the iris was brownish and surrounded by a narrow carmine ring 24 35 The plumage of the sexes was similar during their first year 36 Of the hundreds of surviving skins only one appears to be aberrant in color an adult female from the collection of Walter Rothschild Natural History Museum at Tring It is a washed brown on the upper parts wing covert secondary feathers and tail where it would otherwise have been gray and white on the primary feathers and underparts The normally black spots are brown and it is pale gray on the head lower back and upper tail covert feathers yet the iridescence is unaffected The brown mutation is a result of a reduction in eumelanin due to incomplete synthesis oxidation of this pigment This sex linked mutation is common in female wild birds but it is thought the white feathers of this specimen are instead the result of bleaching due to exposure to sunlight 37 nbsp Skeleton of a male bird 1914The passenger pigeon was physically adapted for speed endurance and maneuverability in flight and has been described as having a streamlined version of the typical pigeon shape such as that of the generalized rock dove Columba livia The wings were very long and pointed and measured 220 mm 8 7 in from the wing chord to the primary feathers and 120 mm 4 7 in to the secondaries The tail which accounted for much of its overall length was long and wedge shaped or graduated with two central feathers longer than the rest The body was slender and narrow and the head and neck were small 24 38 39 The internal anatomy of the passenger pigeon has rarely been described Robert W Shufeldt found little to differentiate the bird s osteology from that of other pigeons when examining a male skeleton in 1914 but Julian P Hume noted several distinct features in a more detailed 2015 description The pigeon had particularly large breast muscles that indicate powerful flight musculus pectoralis major for downstroke and the smaller musculus supracoracoideus for upstroke The coracoid bone which connects the scapula furcula and sternum was large relative to the size of the bird 33 4 mm 1 31 in with straighter shafts and more robust articular ends than in other pigeons The furcula had a sharper V shape and was more robust with expanded articular ends The scapula was long straight and robust and its distal end was enlarged The sternum was very large and robust compared to that of other pigeons its keel was 25 mm 0 98 in deep The overlapping uncinate processes which stiffen the ribcage were very well developed The wing bones humerus radius ulna carpometacarpus were short but robust compared to other pigeons The leg bones were similar to those of other pigeons 39 40 41 Vocalizations edit nbsp Musical notes documenting male vocalizations compiled by Wallace Craig 1911The noise produced by flocks of passenger pigeons was described as deafening audible for miles away and the bird s voice as loud harsh and unmusical It was also described by some as clucks twittering and cooing and as a series of low notes instead of an actual song The birds apparently made croaking noises when building nests and bell like sounds when mating During feeding some individuals would give alarm calls when facing a threat and the rest of the flock would join the sound while taking off 24 42 43 In 1911 American behavioral scientist Wallace Craig published an account of the gestures and sounds of this species as a series of descriptions and musical notations based on observation of C O Whitman s captive passenger pigeons in 1903 Craig compiled these records to assist in identifying potential survivors in the wild as the physically similar mourning doves could otherwise be mistaken for passenger pigeons while noting this meager information was likely all that would be left on the subject According to Craig one call was a simple harsh keck that could be given twice in succession with a pause in between This was said to be used to attract the attention of another pigeon Another call was a more frequent and variable scolding This sound was described as kee kee kee kee or tete tete tete and was used to call either to its mate or towards other creatures it considered to be enemies One variant of this call described as a long drawn out tweet could be used to call down a flock of passenger pigeons passing overhead which would then land in a nearby tree Keeho was a soft cooing that while followed by louder keck notes or scolding was directed at the bird s mate A nesting passenger pigeon would also give off a stream of at least eight mixed notes that were both high and low in tone and ended with keeho Overall female passenger pigeons were quieter and called infrequently Craig suggested that the loud strident voice and degenerated musicality was the result of living in populous colonies where only the loudest sounds could be heard 42 44 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Specimen in flying pose Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel UniversityThe passenger pigeon was found across most of North America east of the Rocky Mountains from the Great Plains to the Atlantic coast in the east to the south of Canada in the north and the north of Mississippi in the southern United States coinciding with its primary habitat the eastern deciduous forests Within this range it constantly migrated in search of food and shelter It is unclear if the birds favored particular trees and terrain but they were possibly not restricted to one type as long as their numbers could be supported 24 34 It originally bred from the southern parts of eastern and central Canada south to eastern Kansas Oklahoma Mississippi and Georgia in the United States but the primary breeding range was in southern Ontario and the Great Lakes states south through states north of the Appalachian Mountains 45 Though the western forests were ecologically similar to those in the east these were occupied by band tailed pigeons which may have kept out the passenger pigeons through competitive exclusion 16 The passenger pigeon wintered from Arkansas Tennessee and North Carolina south to Texas the Gulf Coast and northern Florida though flocks occasionally wintered as far north as southern Pennsylvania and Connecticut It preferred to winter in large swamps particularly those with alder trees if swamps were not available forested areas particularly with pine trees were favored roosting sites There were also sightings of passenger pigeons outside of its normal range including in several Western states Bermuda Cuba and Mexico particularly during severe winters 45 46 47 It has been suggested that some of these extralimital records may have been due to the paucity of observers rather than the actual extent of passenger pigeons North America was then unsettled country and the bird may have appeared anywhere on the continent except for the far west 34 There were also records of stragglers in Scotland Ireland and France although these birds may have been escaped captives or the records incorrect 24 45 More than 130 passenger pigeon fossils have been found scattered across 25 US states including in the La Brea Tar Pits of California These records date as far back as 100 000 years ago in the Pleistocene era during which the pigeon s range extended to several western states that were not a part of its modern range The abundance of the species in these regions and during this time is unknown 45 48 49 Ecology and behavior edit nbsp Live male in Whitman s aviary 1896 98The passenger pigeon was nomadic constantly migrating in search of food shelter or nesting grounds 24 In his 1831 Ornithological Biography American naturalist and artist John James Audubon described a migration he observed in 1813 as follows I dismounted seated myself on an eminence and began to mark with my pencil making a dot for every flock that passed In a short time finding the task which I had undertaken impracticable as the birds poured in in countless multitudes I rose and counting the dots then put down found that 163 had been made in twenty one minutes I traveled on and still met more the farther I proceeded The air was literally filled with Pigeons the light of noon day was obscured as by an eclipse the dung fell in spots not unlike melting flakes of snow and the continued buzz of wings had a tendency to lull my senses to repose I cannot describe to you the extreme beauty of their aerial evolutions when a hawk chanced to press upon the rear of the flock At once like a torrent and with a noise like thunder they rushed into a compact mass pressing upon each other towards the center In these almost solid masses they darted forward in undulating and angular lines descended and swept close over the earth with inconceivable velocity mounted perpendicularly so as to resemble a vast column and when high were seen wheeling and twisting within their continued lines which then resembled the coils of a gigantic serpent Before sunset I reached Louisville distant from Hardensburgh fifty five miles The Pigeons were still passing in undiminished numbers and continued to do so for three days in succession 50 These flocks were frequently described as being so dense that they blackened the sky and as having no sign of subdivisions The flocks ranged from only 1 0 m 3 3 ft above the ground in windy conditions to as high as 400 m 1 300 ft These migrating flocks were typically in narrow columns that twisted and undulated and they were reported as being in nearly every conceivable shape 46 A skilled flyer the passenger pigeon is estimated to have averaged 100 km h 62 mph during migration It flew with quick repeated flaps that increased the bird s velocity the closer the wings got to the body It was equally adept and quick flying through a forest as through open space A flock was also adept at following the lead of the pigeon in front of it and flocks swerved together to avoid a predator When landing the pigeon flapped its wings repeatedly before raising them at the moment of landing The pigeon was awkward when on the ground and moved around with jerky alert steps 51 nbsp Illustration of migrating flocks Frank Bond 1920The passenger pigeon was one of the most social of all land birds 52 Estimated to have numbered three to five billion at the height of its population it may have been the most numerous bird on Earth researcher Arlie W Schorger believed that it accounted for between 25 and 40 percent of the total land bird population in the United States 53 The passenger pigeon s historic population is roughly the equivalent of the number of birds that overwinter in the United States every year in the early 21st century 54 Even within their range the size of individual flocks could vary greatly In November 1859 Henry David Thoreau writing in Concord Massachusetts noted that quite a little flock of passenger pigeons bred here last summer 55 while only seven years later in 1866 one flock in southern Ontario was described as being 1 5 km 0 93 mi wide and 500 km 310 mi long took 14 hours to pass and held in excess of 3 5 billion birds 56 Such a number would likely represent a large fraction of the entire population at the time or perhaps all of it 16 Most estimations of numbers were based on single migrating colonies and it is unknown how many of these existed at a given time American writer Christopher Cokinos has suggested that if the birds flew single file they would have stretched around the Earth 22 times 57 A 2014 genetic study based on coalescent theory and on sequences from most of the genome of three individual passenger pigeons suggested that the passenger pigeon population experienced dramatic fluctuations across the last million years due to their dependence on availability of mast which itself fluctuates The study suggested the bird was not always abundant mainly persisting at around 1 10 000 the amount of the several billions estimated in the 1800s with vastly larger numbers present during outbreak phases 58 59 Some early accounts also suggest that the appearance of flocks in great numbers was an irregular occurrence 36 These large fluctuations in population may have been the result of a disrupted ecosystem and have consisted of outbreak populations much larger than those common in pre European times 60 The authors of the 2014 genetic study note that a similar analysis of the human population size arrives at an effective population size of between 9 000 and 17 000 individuals or approximately 1 550 000th of the peak total human population size of 7 billion cited in the study 58 For a 2017 genetic study the authors sequenced the genomes of two additional passenger pigeons as well as analyzing the mitochondrial DNA of 41 individuals 61 62 63 This study found evidence that the passenger pigeon population had been stable for at least the previous 20 000 years 64 The study also found that the size of the passenger pigeon population over that time period had been larger than the 2014 genetic study had found However the 2017 study s conservative estimate of an effective population size of 13 million birds is still only about 1 300th of the bird s estimated historic population of approximately 3 5 billion before their 19th century decline and eventual extinction 61 A similar study inferring human population size from genetics published in 2008 and using human mitochondrial DNA and Bayesian coalescent inference methods showed considerable accuracy in reflecting overall patterns of human population growth as compared to data deduced by other means though the study arrived at a human effective population size as of 1600 AD for Africa Eurasia and the Americas combined that was roughly 1 1000 of the census population estimate for the same time and area based on anthropological and historical evidence 65 66 The 2017 passenger pigeon genetic study also found that in spite of its large population size the genetic diversity was very low in the species The authors suggested that this was a side effect of natural selection which theory and previous empirical studies suggested could have a particularly great impact on species with very large and cohesive populations 67 68 Natural selection can reduce genetic diversity over extended regions of a genome through selective sweeps or background selection The authors found evidence of a faster rate of adaptive evolution and faster removal of harmful mutations in passenger pigeons compared to band tailed pigeons which are some of passenger pigeons closest living relatives They also found evidence of lower genetic diversity in regions of the passenger pigeon genome that have lower rates of genetic recombination This is expected if natural selection via selective sweeps or background selection reduced their genetic diversity but not if population instability did The study concluded that earlier suggestion that population instability contributed to the extinction of the species was invalid 61 Evolutionary biologist A Townsend Peterson said of the two passenger pigeon genetic studies published in 2014 and 2017 that though the idea of extreme fluctuations in the passenger pigeon population was deeply entrenched he was persuaded by the 2017 study s argument due to its in depth analysis and massive data resources 62 nbsp Juvenile left male center female right Louis Agassiz Fuertes 1910A communally roosting species the passenger pigeon chose roosting sites that could provide shelter and enough food to sustain their large numbers for an indefinite period The time spent at one roosting site may have depended on the extent of human persecution weather conditions or other unknown factors Roosts ranged in size and extent from a few acres to 260 km2 100 sq mi or greater Some roosting areas would be reused for subsequent years others would only be used once 24 The passenger pigeon roosted in such numbers that even thick tree branches would break under the strain The birds frequently piled on top of each other s backs to roost They rested in a slumped position that hid their feet They slept with their bills concealed by the feathers in the middle of the breast while holding their tail at a 45 degree angle 51 Dung could accumulate under a roosting site to a depth of over 0 3 m 1 0 ft 42 nbsp Alert parent bird posing defiantly towards the camera 1896 published 1913 If the pigeon became alert it would often stretch out its head and neck in line with its body and tail then nod its head in a circular pattern When aggravated by another pigeon it raised its wings threateningly but passenger pigeons almost never actually fought The pigeon bathed in shallow water and afterwards lay on each side in turn and raised the opposite wing to dry it 51 The passenger pigeon drank at least once a day typically at dawn by fully inserting its bill into lakes small ponds and streams Pigeons were seen perching on top of each other to access water and if necessary the species could alight on open water to drink 42 One of the primary causes of natural mortality was the weather and every spring many individuals froze to death after migrating north too early In captivity a passenger pigeon was capable of living at least 15 years Martha the last known living passenger pigeon was at least 17 and possibly as old as 29 when she died It is undocumented how long a wild pigeon lived 69 The bird is believed to have played a significant ecological role in the composition of pre Columbian forests of eastern North America For instance while the passenger pigeon was extant forests were dominated by white oaks This species germinated in the fall therefore making its seeds almost useless as a food source during the spring breeding season while red oaks produced acorns during the spring which were devoured by the pigeons The absence of the passenger pigeon s seed consumption may have contributed to the modern dominance of red oaks Due to the immense amount of dung present at roosting sites few plants grew for years after the pigeons left Also the accumulation of flammable debris such as limbs broken from trees and foliage killed by excrement at these sites may have increased both the frequency and intensity of forest fires which would have favored fire tolerant species such as bur oaks black oaks and white oaks over less fire tolerant species such as red oaks thus helping to explain the change in the composition of eastern forests since the passenger pigeon s extinction from white oaks bur oaks and black oaks predominating in presettlement forests to the dramatic expansion of red oaks today 54 A study released in 2018 concluded that the vast numbers of passenger pigeons present for tens of thousands of years would have influenced the evolution of the tree species whose seeds they ate Those masting trees that produced seeds during the spring nesting season such as red oaks evolved so that some portion of their seeds would be too large for passenger pigeons to swallow thus allowing some of their seeds to escape predation and grow new trees White oak in contrast with its seeds sized consistently in the edible range evolved an irregular masting pattern that took place in the fall when fewer passenger pigeons would have been present The study further concluded that this allowed white oaks to be the dominant tree species in regions where passenger pigeons were commonly present in the spring 70 With the large numbers in passenger pigeon flocks the excrement they produced was enough to destroy surface level vegetation at long term roosting sites while adding high quantities of nutrients to the ecosystem Because of this along with the breaking of tree limbs under their collective weight and the great amount of mast they consumed passenger pigeons are thought to have influenced both the structure of eastern forests and the composition of the species present there 54 Due to these influences some ecologists have considered the passenger pigeon a keystone species 58 with the disappearance of their vast flocks leaving a major gap in the ecosystem 71 Their role in creating forest disturbances has been linked to greater vertebrate diversity in forests by creating more niches for animals to fill 72 To help fill that ecological gap it has been proposed that modern land managers attempt to replicate some of their effects on the ecosystem by creating openings in forest canopies to provide more understory light 73 The American chestnut trees that provided much of the mast on which the passenger pigeon fed was itself almost driven to extinction by an imported Asian fungus chestnut blight around 1905 As many as thirty billion trees are thought to have died as a result in the following decades but this did not affect the passenger pigeon which was already extinct in the wild at the time 24 After the disappearance of the passenger pigeon the population of another acorn feeding species the white footed mouse grew exponentially because of the increased availability of the seeds of the oak beech and chestnut trees 74 It has been speculated 75 that the extinction of passenger pigeons may have increased the prevalence of tick borne lyme disease in modern times as white footed mice are the reservoir hosts of Borrelia burgdorferi 76 Diet edit nbsp Acorns in South Carolina among the diet of this birdBeeches and oaks produced the mast needed to support nesting and roosting flocks 77 The passenger pigeon changed its diet depending on the season In the fall winter and spring it mainly ate beechnuts acorns and chestnuts During the summer berries and softer fruits such as blueberries grapes cherries mulberries pokeberries and bunchberry became the main objects of its consumption It also ate worms caterpillars snails and other invertebrates particularly while breeding 24 47 It took advantage of cultivated grains particularly buckwheat when it found them It was especially fond of salt which it ingested either from brackish springs or salty soil 77 Mast occurs in large quantities in different places at different times and rarely in consecutive years which is one of the reasons why the large flocks were constantly on the move As mast is produced during autumn there would have to be a large amount of it left by the summer when the young were reared It is unknown how they located this fluctuating food source but their eyesight and flight powers helped them survey large areas for places that could provide food enough for a temporary stay 16 24 nbsp Internal organs of Martha the last individual cr denotes the crop gz the gizzard 1915The passenger pigeon foraged in flocks of tens or hundreds of thousands of individuals that overturned leaves dirt and snow with their bills in search of food One observer described the motion of such a flock in search of mast as having a rolling appearance as birds in the back of the flock flew overhead to the front of the flock dropping leaves and grass in flight 24 47 The flocks had wide leading edges to better scan the landscape for food sources 77 When nuts on a tree loosened from their caps a pigeon would land on a branch and while flapping vigorously to stay balanced grab the nut pull it loose from its cap and swallow it whole Collectively a foraging flock was capable of removing nearly all fruits and nuts from their path Birds in the back of the flock flew to the front in order to pick over unsearched ground however birds never ventured far from the flock and hurried back if they became isolated It is believed that the pigeons used social cues to identify abundant sources of food and a flock of pigeons that saw others feeding on the ground often joined them 47 During the day the birds left the roosting forest to forage on more open land 46 They regularly flew 100 to 130 km 62 to 81 mi away from their roost daily in search of food and some pigeons reportedly traveled as far as 160 km 99 mi leaving the roosting area early and returning at night 24 54 The passenger pigeon had a very elastic mouth and throat allowing for increased capacity and a joint in the lower bill enabled it to swallow acorns whole It could store large quantities of food in its crop which could expand to about the size of an orange causing the neck to bulge and allowing a bird quickly to grab any food it discovered The crop was described as being capable of holding at least 17 acorns or 28 beechnuts 11 grains of corn 100 maple seeds plus other material it was estimated that a passenger pigeon needed to eat about 61 cm3 3 7 in3 of food a day to survive If shot a pigeon with a crop full of nuts would fall to the ground with a sound described as like the rattle of a bag of marbles After feeding the pigeons perched on branches and digested the food stored in their crop overnight 24 47 54 The pigeon could eat and digest 100 g 3 5 oz of acorns per day 78 At the historic population of three billion passenger pigeons this amounted to 210 000 000 L 55 000 000 US gal of food a day 54 The pigeon could regurgitate food from its crop when more desirable food became available 43 A 2018 study found that the dietary range of the passenger pigeon was restricted to certain sizes of seed due to the size of its gape This would have prevented it from eating some of the seeds of trees such as red oaks the black oak and the American chestnut Specifically the study found that between 13 and 69 of red oak seeds were too large for passenger pigeons to have swallowed that only a small proportion of the seeds of black oaks and American chestnuts were too large for the birds to consume and that all white oak seeds were sized within an edible range They also found that seeds would be completely destroyed during digestion which therefore hindered dispersal of seeds this way Instead passenger pigeons may have spread seeds by regurgitation or after dying 70 Reproduction edit nbsp Nesting captive bird wary of the photographerOther than finding roosting sites the migrations of the passenger pigeon were connected with finding places appropriate for this communally breeding bird to nest and raise its young It is not certain how many times a year the birds bred once seems most likely but some accounts suggest more The nesting period lasted around four to six weeks The flock arrived at a nesting ground around March in southern latitudes and some time later in more northern areas 24 53 The pigeon had no site fidelity often choosing to nest in a different location each year 69 The formation of a nesting colony did not necessarily take place until several months after the pigeons arrived on their breeding grounds typically during late March April or May 79 The colonies which were known as cities were immense ranging from 49 ha 120 acres to thousands of hectares in size and were often long and narrow in shape L shaped with a few areas untouched for unknown reasons Due to the topography they were rarely continuous Since no accurate data was recorded it is not possible to give more than estimates on the size and population of these nesting areas but most accounts mention colonies containing millions of birds The largest nesting area ever recorded was in central Wisconsin in 1871 it was reported as covering 2 200 km2 850 sq mi with the number of birds nesting there estimated to be around 136 000 000 As well as these cities there were regular reports of much smaller flocks or even individual pairs setting up a nesting site 24 79 The birds do not seem to have formed as vast breeding colonies at the periphery of their range 36 Courtship took place at the nesting colony 52 Unlike other pigeons courtship took place on a branch or perch The male with a flourish of the wings made a keck call while near a female The male then gripped tightly to the branch and vigorously flapped his wings up and down When the male was close to the female he then pressed against her on the perch with his head held high and pointing at her 51 If receptive the female pressed back against the male 52 When ready to mate the pair preened each other This was followed by the birds billing in which the female inserted its bill into and clasped the male s bill shook for a second and separated quickly while standing next to each other The male then scrambled onto the female s back and copulated which was then followed by soft clucking and occasionally more preening 52 John James Audubon described the courtship of the passenger pigeon as follows nbsp Nest and egg in Whitman s aviaryThither the countless myriads resort and prepare to fulfill one of the great laws of nature At this period the note of the Pigeon is a soft coo coo coo coo much shorter than that of the domestic species The common notes resemble the monosyllables kee kee kee kee the first being the loudest the others gradually diminishing In power The male assumes a pompous demeanor and follows the female whether on the ground or on the branches with spread tail and drooping wings which it rubs against the part over which it is moving The body is elevated the throat swells the eyes sparkle He continues his notes and now and then rises on the wing and flies a few yards to approach the fugitive and timorous female Like the domestic Pigeon and other species they caress each other by billing in which action the bill of the one is introduced transversely into that of the other and both parties alternately disgorge the contents of their crop by repeated efforts 50 After observing captive birds Wallace Craig found that this species did less charging and strutting than other pigeons as it was awkward on the ground and thought it probable that no food was transferred during their brief billing unlike in other pigeons and he therefore considered Audubon s description partially based on analogy with other pigeons as well as imagination 44 51 nbsp Preserved egg Museum de ToulouseNests were built immediately after pair formation and took two to four days to construct this process was highly synchronized within a colony 79 The female chose the nesting site by sitting on it and flicking its wings The male then carefully selected nesting materials typically twigs and handed them to the female over her back The male then went in search of more nesting material while the female constructed the nest beneath herself Nests were built between 2 0 and 20 1 m 6 6 and 65 9 ft above the ground though typically above 4 0 m 13 1 ft and were made of 70 to 110 twigs woven together to create a loose shallow bowl through which the egg could easily be seen This bowl was then typically lined with finer twigs The nests were about 150 mm 5 9 in wide 61 mm 2 4 in high and 19 mm 0 75 in deep Though the nest has been described as crude and flimsy compared to those of many other birds remains of nests could be found at sites where nesting had taken place several years prior Nearly every tree capable of supporting nests had them often more than 50 per tree one hemlock was recorded as holding 317 nests The nests were placed on strong branches close to the tree trunks Some accounts state that ground under the nesting area looked as if it had been swept clean due to all the twigs being collected at the same time yet this area would also have been covered in dung 24 43 80 As both sexes took care of the nest the pairs were monogamous for the duration of the nesting 51 nbsp Live nestling or squabGenerally the eggs were laid during the first two weeks of April across the pigeon s range 79 Each female laid its egg immediately or almost immediately after the nest was completed sometimes the pigeon was forced to lay it on the ground if the nest was not complete 81 The normal clutch size appears to have been a single egg but there is some uncertainty about this as two have also been reported from the same nests 24 Occasionally a second female laid its egg in another female s nest resulting in two eggs being present 82 The egg was white and oval shaped and averaged 40 by 34 mm 1 6 by 1 3 in in size 80 If the egg was lost it was possible for the pigeon to lay a replacement egg within a week 81 A whole colony was known to re nest after a snowstorm forced them to abandon their original colony 69 The egg was incubated by both parents for 12 to 14 days with the male incubating it from midmorning to midafternoon and the female incubating it for the rest of the time 24 81 Upon hatching the nestling or squab was blind and sparsely covered with yellow hairlike down 81 The nestling developed quickly and within 14 days weighed as much as its parents During this brooding period both parents took care of the nestling with the male attending in the middle of the day and the female at other times The nestlings were fed crop milk a substance similar to curd produced in the crops of the parent birds exclusively for the first days after hatching Adult food was gradually introduced after three to six days After 13 to 15 days the parents fed the nestling for a last time and then abandoned it leaving the nesting area en masse The nestling begged in the nest for a day or two before climbing from the nest and fluttering to the ground whereafter it moved around avoided obstacles and begged for food from nearby adults It was another three or four days before it fledged 24 82 The entire nesting cycle lasted about 30 days 43 It is unknown whether colonies re nested after a successful nesting 69 The passenger pigeon sexually matured during its first year and bred the following spring 82 Alfred Russel Wallace in his historic 1858 paper On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection used the passenger pigeon as an example of an immensely successful species despite laying fewer eggs than most other birds It would therefore appear that as far as the continuance of the species and the keeping up the average number of individuals are concerned large broods are superfluous On the average all above one become food for hawks and kites wild cats and weasels or perish of cold and hunger as winter comes on This is strikingly proved by the case of particular species for we find that their abundance in individuals bears no relation whatever to their fertility in producing offspring Perhaps the most remarkable instance of an immense bird population is that of the passenger pigeon of the United States which lays only one or at most two eggs and is said to rear generally but one young one Why is this bird so extraordinarily abundant while others producing two or three times as many young are much less plentiful The explanation is not difficult The food most congenial to this species and on which it thrives best is abundantly distributed over a very extensive region offering such differences of soil and climate that in one part or another of the area the supply never fails The bird is capable of a very rapid and long continued flight so that it can pass without fatigue over the whole of the district it inhabits and as soon as the supply of food begins to fail in one place is able to discover a fresh feeding ground This example strikingly shows us that the procuring a constant supply of wholesome food is almost the sole condition requisite for ensuring the rapid increase of a given species since neither the limited fecundity nor the unrestrained attacks of birds of prey and of man are here sufficient to check it In no other birds are these peculiar circumstances so strikingly combined Either their food is more liable to failure or they have not sufficient power of wing to search for it over an extensive area or during some season of the year it becomes very scarce and less wholesome substitutes have to be found and thus though more fertile in offspring they can never increase beyond the supply of food in the least favourable seasons 83 Predators and parasites edit nbsp Immature bird the young were vulnerable to predators after leaving the nestNesting colonies attracted large numbers of predators including American minks Neogale vison long tailed weasels Neogale frenata American martens Martes americana and raccoons Procyon lotor that preyed on eggs and nestlings birds of prey such as owls hawks and eagles that preyed on nestlings and adults and wolves Canis lupus foxes Urocyon cinereoargenteus and Vulpes vulpes bobcats Lynx rufus American black bears Ursus americanus and cougars Puma concolor that preyed on injured adults and fallen nestlings Hawks of the genus Accipiter and falcons pursued and preyed upon pigeons in flight which in turn executed complex aerial maneuvers to avoid them Cooper s hawk Accipiter cooperii was known as the great pigeon hawk due to its successes and these hawks allegedly followed migrating passenger pigeons 52 While many predators were drawn to the flocks individual pigeons were largely protected due to the sheer size of the flock and overall little damage could be inflicted on the flock by predation 52 Despite the number of predators nesting colonies were so large that they were estimated to have a 90 success rate if not disturbed 69 After being abandoned and leaving the nest the very fat juveniles were vulnerable to predators until they were able to fly The sheer number of juveniles on the ground meant that only a small percentage of them were killed predator satiation may therefore be one of the reasons for the extremely social habits and communal breeding of the species 24 32 Two parasites have been recorded on passenger pigeons One species of phtilopterid louse Columbicola extinctus was originally thought to have lived on just passenger pigeons and to have become coextinct with them This was proven inaccurate in 1999 when C extinctus was rediscovered living on band tailed pigeons 84 85 This and the fact that the related louse C angustus is mainly found on cuckoo doves further supports the relation between these pigeons as the phylogeny of lice broadly mirrors that of their hosts 19 Another louse Campanulotes defectus was thought to have been unique to the passenger pigeon but is now believed to have been a case of a contaminated specimen as the species is considered to be the still extant Campanulotes flavus of Australia 85 There is no record of a wild pigeon dying of either disease or parasites 69 Relationship with humans edit nbsp Billing pair by John James Audubon from The Birds of America 1827 1838 This image has been criticized for its scientific inaccuracy For fifteen thousand years or more before the arrival of Europeans in the Americas passenger pigeons and Native Americans coexisted in the forests of what would later become the eastern part of the continental United States 86 87 88 A study published in 2008 found that throughout most of the Holocene Native American land use practices greatly influenced forest composition The regular use of prescribed burn the girdling of unwanted trees and the planting and tending of favored trees suppressed the populations of a number of tree species that did not produce nuts acorns or fruit while increasing the populations of numerous tree species that did In addition the burning away of forest floor litter made these foods easier to find once they had fallen from the trees 89 Some have argued that such Native American land use practices increased the populations of various animal species including the passenger pigeon by increasing the food available to them 90 91 92 while elsewhere it has been claimed that by hunting passenger pigeons and competing with them for some kinds of nuts and acorns Native Americans suppressed their population size 93 Genetic research may shed some light on this question A 2017 study of passenger pigeon DNA found that the passenger pigeon population size had been stable for 20 000 years prior to its 19th century decline and subsequent extinction while a 2016 study of ancient Native American DNA found that the Native American population went through a period of rapid expansion increasing 60 fold starting about 13 16 thousand years ago If both of these studies are correct then a great change in the size of the Native American population had no apparent impact on the size of the passenger pigeon population This suggests that the net effect of Native American activities on passenger pigeon population size was neutral 61 94 The passenger pigeon played a religious role for some northern Native American tribes The Wyandot people or Huron believed that every twelve years during the Feast of the Dead the souls of the dead changed into passenger pigeons which were then hunted and eaten 95 Before hunting the juvenile pigeons the Seneca people made an offering of wampum and brooches to the old passenger pigeons these were placed in a small kettle or other receptacle by a smoky fire 95 The Ho Chunk people considered the passenger pigeon to be the bird of the chief as they were served whenever the chieftain gave a feast 96 The Seneca people believed that a white pigeon was the chief of the passenger pigeon colony and that a Council of Birds had decided that the pigeons had to give their bodies to the Seneca because they were the only birds that nested in colonies The Seneca developed a pigeon dance as a way of showing their gratitude 96 French explorer Jacques Cartier was the first European to report on passenger pigeons during his voyage in 1534 97 The bird was subsequently observed and noted by historical figures such as Samuel de Champlain and Cotton Mather Most early accounts dwell on the vast number of pigeons the resulting darkened skies and the enormous amount of hunted birds 50 000 birds were reportedly sold at a Boston market in 1771 57 The early colonists thought that large flights of pigeons would be followed by ill fortune or sickness When the pigeons wintered outside of their normal range some believed that they would have a sickly summer and autumn 98 In the 18th and 19th centuries various parts of the pigeon were thought to have medicinal properties The blood was supposed to be good for eye disorders the powdered stomach lining was used to treat dysentery and the dung was used to treat a variety of ailments including headaches stomach pains and lethargy 99 Though they did not last as long as the feathers of a goose the feathers of the passenger pigeon were frequently used for bedding Pigeon feather beds were so popular that for a time in Saint Jerome Quebec every dowry included a bed and pillows made of pigeon feathers In 1822 one family in Chautauqua County New York killed 4 000 pigeons in a day solely for this purpose 100 nbsp Painting of a male K Hayashi c 1900The passenger pigeon was featured in the writings of many significant early naturalists as well as accompanying illustrations Mark Catesby s 1731 illustration the first published depiction of this bird is somewhat crude according to some later commentators The original watercolor that the engraving is based on was bought by the British royal family in 1768 along with the rest of Catesby s watercolors The naturalists Alexander Wilson and John James Audubon both witnessed large pigeon migrations first hand and published detailed accounts wherein both attempted to deduce the total number of birds involved The most famous and often reproduced depiction of the passenger pigeon is Audubon s illustration handcolored aquatint in his book The Birds of America published between 1827 and 1838 Audubon s image has been praised for its artistic qualities but criticized for its supposed scientific inaccuracies As Wallace Craig and R W Shufeldt among others pointed out the birds are shown perched and billing one above the other whereas they would instead have done this side by side the male would be the one passing food to the female and the male s tail would not be spread Craig and Shufeldt instead cited illustrations by American artist Louis Agassiz Fuertes and Japanese artist K Hayashi as more accurate depictions of the bird Illustrations of the passenger pigeon were often drawn after stuffed birds and Charles R Knight is the only serious artist known to have drawn the species from life He did so on at least two occasions in 1903 he drew a bird possibly in one of the three aviaries with surviving birds and some time before 1914 he drew Martha the last individual in the Cincinnati Zoo 50 57 101 102 103 44 The bird has been written about including in poems songs A and fiction and illustrated by many notable writers and artists and is depicted in art to this day for example in Walton Ford s 2002 painting Falling Bough and National Medal of Arts winner John A Ruthven s 2014 mural in Cincinnati which commemorates the 100th anniversary of Martha s death 101 The centennial of its extinction was used by the Project Passenger Pigeon outreach group to spread awareness about human induced extinction and to recognize its relevance in the 21st century It has been suggested that the passenger pigeon could be used as a flagship species to spread awareness of other threatened but less well known North American birds 108 Hunting edit nbsp Depiction of a shooting in northern Louisiana Smith Bennett 1875The passenger pigeon was an important source of food for the people of North America 109 Native Americans ate pigeons and tribes near nesting colonies would sometimes move to live closer to them and eat the juveniles killing them at night with long poles 110 Many Native Americans were careful not to disturb the adult pigeons and instead ate only the juveniles as they were afraid that the adults might desert their nesting grounds in some tribes disturbing the adult pigeons was considered a crime 111 Away from the nests large nets were used to capture adult pigeons sometimes up to 800 at a time 112 Low flying pigeons could be killed by throwing sticks or stones At one site in Oklahoma the pigeons leaving their roost every morning flew low enough that the Cherokee could throw clubs into their midst which caused the lead pigeons to try to turn aside and in the process created a blockade that resulted in a large mass of flying easily hit pigeons 113 Among the game birds passenger pigeons were second only to the wild turkey Meleagris gallopavo in terms of importance for the Native Americans living in the southeastern United States The bird s fat was stored often in large quantities and used as butter Archaeological evidence supports the idea that Native Americans ate the pigeons frequently prior to colonization 114 nbsp 1881 spread showing methods of trapping pigeons for shooting contestsWhat may be the earliest account of Europeans hunting passenger pigeons dates to January 1565 when the French explorer Rene Laudonniere wrote of killing close to 10 000 of them around Fort Caroline in a matter of weeks There came to us a manna of wood pigeons in such great numbers that over a span of about seven weeks each day we killed more than two hundred with arquebuses in the woods around our fort 115 116 This amounted to about one passenger pigeon per day for each person in the fort 117 After European colonization the passenger pigeon was hunted more intensively and with more sophisticated methods than the more sustainable methods practiced by the natives 32 Yet it has also been suggested that the species was rare prior to 1492 and that the subsequent increase in their numbers may be due to the decrease in the Native American population who as well as hunting the birds competed with them for mast caused by European immigration and the supplementary food agricultural crops the immigrants imported 118 a theory for which Joel Greenberg offered a detailed rebuttal in his book A Feathered River Across the Sky 86 The passenger pigeon was of particular value on the frontier and some settlements counted on its meat to support their population 119 120 The flavor of the flesh of passenger pigeons varied depending on how they were prepared In general juveniles were thought to taste the best followed by birds fattened in captivity and birds caught in September and October It was common practice to fatten trapped pigeons before eating them or storing their bodies for winter 109 Dead pigeons were commonly stored by salting or pickling the bodies other times only the breasts of the pigeons were kept in which case they were typically smoked In the early 19th century commercial hunters began netting and shooting the birds to sell as food in city markets and even as pig fodder Once pigeon meat became popular commercial hunting started on a prodigious scale 120 121 Passenger pigeons were shot with such ease that many did not consider them to be a game bird as an amateur hunter could easily bring down six with one shotgun blast a particularly good shot with both barrels of a shotgun at a roost could kill 61 birds 122 123 The birds were frequently shot either in flight during migration or immediately after when they commonly perched in dead exposed trees 122 Hunters only had to shoot toward the sky without aiming and many pigeons would be brought down 32 The pigeons proved difficult to shoot head on so hunters typically waited for the flocks to pass overhead before shooting them Trenches were sometimes dug and filled with grain so that a hunter could shoot the pigeons along this trench 124 Hunters largely outnumbered trappers and hunting passenger pigeons was a popular sport for young boys 125 In 1871 a single seller of ammunition provided three tons of powder and 16 tons 32 000 lb of shot during a nesting In the latter half of the 19th century thousands of passenger pigeons were captured for use in the sports shooting industry The pigeons were used as living targets in shooting tournaments such as trap shooting the controlled release of birds from special traps Competitions could also consist of people standing regularly spaced while trying to shoot down as many birds as possible in a passing flock 32 126 The pigeon was considered so numerous that 30 000 birds had to be killed to claim the prize in one competition 43 nbsp Pigeon net in Canada by James Pattison Cockburn 1829There were a wide variety of other methods used to capture and kill passenger pigeons Nets were propped up to allow passenger pigeons entry then closed by knocking loose the stick that supported the opening trapping twenty or more pigeons inside 127 Tunnel nets were also used to great effect and one particularly large net was capable of catching 3 500 pigeons at a time 128 These nets were used by many farmers on their own property as well as by professional trappers 129 Food would be placed on the ground near the nets to attract the pigeons Decoy or stool pigeons sometimes blinded by having their eyelids sewn together were tied to a stool When a flock of pigeons passed by a cord would be pulled that made the stool pigeon flutter to the ground making it seem as if it had found food and the flock would be lured into the trap 32 130 131 Salt was also frequently used as bait and many trappers set up near salt springs 132 At least one trapper used alcohol soaked grain as bait to intoxicate the birds and make them easier to kill 113 Another method of capture was to hunt at a nesting colony particularly during the period of a few days after the adult pigeons abandoned their nestlings but before the nestlings could fly Some hunters used sticks to poke the nestlings out of the nest while others shot the bottom of a nest with a blunt arrow to dislodge the pigeon Others cut down a nesting tree in such a way that when it fell it would also hit a second nesting tree and dislodge the pigeons within 133 In one case 6 km2 1 500 acres of large trees were speedily cut down to get birds and such methods were common 32 A severe method was to set fire to the base of a tree nested with pigeons the adults would flee and the juveniles would fall to the ground 134 135 Sulfur was sometimes burned beneath the nesting tree to suffocate the birds which fell out of the tree in a weakened state 136 nbsp Trapper Albert Cooper with blind decoy pigeons for luring wild birds c 1870By the mid 19th century railroads had opened new opportunities for pigeon hunters While previously it had proved too difficult to ship masses of pigeons to eastern cities the access provided by the railroad permitted pigeon hunting to become commercialized 121 An extensive telegraph system was introduced in the 1860s which improved communication across the United States making it easier to spread information about the whereabouts of pigeon flocks 126 After being opened up to the railroads the town of Plattsburgh New York is estimated to have shipped 1 8 million pigeons to larger cities in 1851 alone at a price of 31 to 56 cents a dozen By the late 19th century the trade of passenger pigeons had become commercialized Large commission houses employed trappers known as pigeoners to follow the flocks of pigeons year round 137 A single hunter is reported to have sent three million birds to eastern cities during his career 138 In 1874 at least 600 people were employed as pigeon trappers a number which grew to 1 200 by 1881 Pigeons were caught in such numbers that by 1876 shipments of dead pigeons were unable to recoup the costs of the barrels and ice needed to ship them 139 The price of a barrel full of pigeons dropped to below fifty cents due to overstocked markets Passenger pigeons were instead kept alive so their meat would be fresh when the birds were killed and sold once their market value had increased again Thousands of birds were kept in large pens though the bad conditions led many to die from lack of food and water and by fretting gnawing themselves many rotted away before they could be sold 57 Hunting of passenger pigeons was documented and depicted in contemporaneous newspapers wherein various trapping methods and uses were featured The most often reproduced of these illustrations was captioned Winter sports in northern Louisiana shooting wild pigeons and published in 1875 Passenger pigeons were also seen as agricultural pests since entire crops could be destroyed by feeding flocks The bird was described as a perfect scourge by some farming communities and hunters were employed to wage warfare on the birds to save grain as shown in another newspaper illustration from 1867 captioned as Shooting wild pigeons in Iowa 126 When comparing these pests to the bison of the Great Plains the valuable resource needed was not the species of animals but the agriculture which was consumed by said animal The crops that were eaten were seen as marketable calories proteins and nutrients all grown for the wrong species 140 141 Decline and conservation attempts edit nbsp Male and female by Louis Agassiz Fuertes frontispiece of William Butts Mershon s 1907 The Passenger PigeonThe notion that the species could be driven to extinction was alien to the early colonists because the number of birds did not appear to diminish and also because the concept of extinction was yet to be defined The bird seems to have been slowly pushed westward after the arrival of Europeans becoming scarce or absent in the east though there were still millions of birds in the 1850s The population must have been decreasing in numbers for many years though this went unnoticed due to the apparent vast number of birds which clouded their decline 57 In 1856 Benedict Henry Revoil may have been one of the first writers to voice concern about the fate of the passenger pigeon after witnessing a hunt in 1847 Everything leads to the belief that the pigeons which cannot endure isolation and are forced to flee or to change their way of living according to the rate at which North America is populated by the European inflow will simply end by disappearing from this continent and if the world does not end this before a century I will wager that the amateur of ornithology will find no more wild pigeons except those in the Museums of Natural History 57 nbsp Life drawing by Charles R Knight 1903By the 1870s the decrease in birds was noticeable especially after the last large scale nestings and subsequent slaughters of millions of birds in 1874 and 1878 By this time large nestings only took place in the north around the Great Lakes The last large nesting was in Petoskey Michigan in 1878 following one in Pennsylvania a few days earlier where 50 000 birds were killed each day for nearly five months The surviving adults attempted a second nesting at new sites but were killed by professional hunters before they had a chance to raise any young Scattered nestings were reported into the 1880s but the birds were now wary and commonly abandoned their nests if persecuted 16 38 57 By the time of these last nestings laws had already been enacted to protect the passenger pigeon but these proved ineffective as they were unclearly framed and hard to enforce H B Roney who had witnessed the Petoskey slaughter led campaigns to protect the pigeon but was met with resistance and accusations that he was exaggerating the severity of the situation Few offenders were prosecuted mainly some poor trappers but the large enterprises were not affected 57 In 1857 a bill was brought forth to the Ohio State Legislature seeking protection for the passenger pigeon yet a Select Committee of the Senate filed a report stating that the bird did not need protection being wonderfully prolific and dismissing the suggestion that the species could be destroyed 142 Public protests against trap shooting erupted in the 1870s as the birds were badly treated before and after such contests Conservationists were ineffective in stopping the slaughter A bill was passed in the Michigan legislature making it illegal to net pigeons within 3 km 1 9 mi of a nesting area In 1897 a bill was introduced in the Michigan legislature asking for a 10 year closed season on passenger pigeons Similar legal measures were passed and then disregarded in Pennsylvania The gestures proved futile and by the mid 1890s the passenger pigeon had almost completely disappeared and was probably extinct as a breeding bird in the wild 126 138 Small flocks are known to have existed at this point since large numbers of birds were still being sold at markets Thereafter only small groups or individual birds were reported many of which were shot on sight 57 Last survivors edit See also Martha passenger pigeon nbsp Buttons the second last confirmed wild passenger pigeon Cincinnati ZooThe last recorded nest and egg in the wild were collected in 1895 near Minneapolis The last wild individual in Louisiana was discovered among a flock of mourning doves in 1896 and subsequently shot Many late sightings are thought to be false or due to confusion with mourning doves 57 The last fully authenticated record of a wild passenger pigeon was near Oakford Illinois on March 12 1901 when a male bird was killed stuffed and placed in Millikin University in Decatur Illinois where it remains today This was not discovered until 2014 when writer Joel Greenberg found out the date of the bird s shooting while doing research for his book A Feathered River Across the Sky Greenberg also pointed out a record of a male shot near Laurel Indiana on April 3 1902 that was stuffed but later destroyed 143 For many years the last confirmed wild passenger pigeon was thought to have been shot near Sargents Pike County Ohio on March 24 1900 when a female bird was killed by a boy named Press Clay Southworth with a BB gun 38 144 The boy had not recognized the bird as a passenger pigeon but his parents identified it and sent it to a taxidermist The specimen nicknamed Buttons due to the buttons used instead of glass eyes was donated to the Ohio Historical Society by the family in 1915 The reliability of accounts after the Ohio Illinois and Indiana birds are in question Ornithologist Alexander Wetmore claimed that he saw a pair flying near Independence Kansas in April 1905 145 146 On May 18 1907 U S President Theodore Roosevelt claimed to have seen a flock of about a dozen two or three times on the wing while on retreat at his cabin in Pine Knot Virginia and that they lit on a dead tree in such a characteristically pigeon like attitude this sighting was corroborated by a local gentleman whom he had rambled around with in the woods a good deal and whom he found to be a singularly close observer 147 148 In 1910 the American Ornithologists Union offered a reward of 3 000 for discovering a nest equivalent to 83 325 in 2020 149 150 nbsp Whitman s aviary with passenger pigeons and other species 1896 98Most captive passenger pigeons were kept for exploitative purposes but some were housed in zoos and aviaries Audubon alone claimed to have brought 350 birds to England in 1830 distributing them among various noblemen and the species is also known to have been kept at London Zoo Being common birds these attracted little interest until the species became rare in the 1890s By the turn of the 20th century the last known captive passenger pigeons were divided in three groups one in Milwaukee one in Chicago and one in Cincinnati There are claims of a few further individuals having been kept in various places but these accounts are not considered reliable today The Milwaukee group was kept by David Whittaker who began his collection in 1888 and possessed fifteen birds some years later all descended from a single pair 16 151 The Chicago group was kept by Charles Otis Whitman whose collection began with passenger pigeons bought from Whittaker beginning in 1896 He had an interest in studying pigeons and kept his passenger pigeons with other pigeon species Whitman brought his pigeons with him from Chicago to Massachusetts by railcar each summer By 1897 Whitman had bought all of Whittaker s birds and upon reaching a maximum of 19 individuals he gave seven back to Whittaker in 1898 Around this time a series of photographs were taken of these birds 24 of the photos survive Some of these images have been reproduced in various media copies of which are now kept at the Wisconsin Historical Society It is unclear exactly where when and by whom these photos were taken but some appear to have been taken in Chicago in 1896 others in Massachusetts in 1898 the latter by a J G Hubbard By 1902 Whitman owned sixteen birds Many eggs were laid by his pigeons but few hatched and many hatchlings died A newspaper inquiry was published that requested fresh blood to the flock which had now ceased breeding By 1907 he was down to two female passenger pigeons that died that winter and was left with two infertile male hybrids whose subsequent fate is unknown By this time only four all males of the birds Whitman had returned to Whittaker were alive and these died between November 1908 and February 1909 151 152 nbsp The Folly of 1857 and the Lesson of 1912 frontispiece to William T Hornaday s Our vanishing wild life 1913 showing Martha in life the endling of the species The Cincinnati Zoo one of the oldest zoos in the United States kept passenger pigeons from its beginning in 1875 The zoo kept more than twenty individuals in a ten by twelve foot cage 151 Passenger pigeons do not appear to have been kept at the zoo due to their rarity but to enable guests to have a closer look at a native species 153 Recognizing the decline of the wild populations Whitman and the Cincinnati Zoo consistently strove to breed the surviving birds including attempts at making a rock dove foster passenger pigeon eggs 154 In 1902 Whitman gave a female passenger pigeon to the zoo this was possibly the individual later known as Martha which would become the last living member of the species Other sources argue that Martha was hatched at the Cincinnati Zoo had lived there for 25 years and was the descendant of three pairs of passenger pigeons purchased by the zoo in 1877 It is thought this individual was named Martha because her last cage mate was named George thereby honoring George Washington and his wife Martha though it has also been claimed she was named after the mother of a zookeeper s friends 151 155 In 1909 Martha and her two male companions at the Cincinnati Zoo became the only known surviving passenger pigeons One of these males died around April that year followed by George the remaining male on July 10 1910 153 It is unknown whether the remains of George were preserved Martha soon became a celebrity due to her status as an endling and offers of a 1 000 reward for finding a mate for her brought even more visitors to see her During her last four years in solitude her cage was 5 4 by 6 m 18 by 20 ft Martha became steadily slower and more immobile visitors would throw sand at her to make her move and her cage was roped off in response 151 156 Martha died of old age on September 1 1914 and was found lifeless on the floor of her cage 41 157 It was claimed that she died at 1 p m but other sources suggest she died some hours later 151 Depending on the source Martha was between 17 and 29 years old at the time of her death although 29 is the generally accepted figure 158 At the time it was suggested that Martha might have died from an apoplectic stroke as she had suffered one a few weeks before dying 159 Her body was frozen into a block of ice and sent to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington where it was skinned dissected photographed and mounted 41 134 As she was molting when she died she proved difficult to stuff and previously shed feathers were added to the skin Martha was on display for many years but after a period in the museum vaults she was put back on display at the Smithsonian s National Museum of Natural History in 2015 151 A memorial statue of Martha stands on the grounds of the Cincinnati Zoo in front of the Passenger Pigeon Memorial Hut formerly the aviary wherein Martha lived now a National Historic Landmark Incidentally the last specimen of the extinct Carolina parakeet named Incus died in Martha s cage in 1918 the stuffed remains of that bird are exhibited in the Memorial Hut 38 160 Extinction causes edit nbsp Martha at the Smithsonian Museum 2015The main reasons for the extinction of the passenger pigeon were the massive scale of hunting the rapid loss of habitat and the extremely social lifestyle of the bird which made it highly vulnerable to the former factors Deforestation was driven by the need to free land for agriculture and expanding towns but also due to the demand for lumber and fuel About 728 000 km2 180 million acres were cleared for farming between 1850 and 1910 Though there are still large woodland areas in eastern North America which support a variety of wildlife it was not enough to support the vast number of passenger pigeons needed to sustain the population In contrast very small populations of nearly extinct birds such as the kakapō Strigops habroptilus and the takahe Porphyrio hochstetteri have been enough to keep those species extant to the present The combined effects of intense hunting and deforestation has been referred to as a Blitzkrieg against the passenger pigeon and it has been labeled one of the greatest and most senseless human induced extinctions in history 32 58 126 As the flocks dwindled in size the passenger pigeon population decreased below the threshold necessary to propagate the species 161 an example of the Allee effect 162 nbsp Pigeons being shot to save crops in Iowa 1867The 2014 genetic study that found natural fluctuations in population numbers prior to human arrival also concluded that the species routinely recovered from lows in the population and suggested that one of these lows may have coincided with the intensified hunting by humans in the 1800s a combination which would have led to the rapid extinction of the species A similar scenario may also explain the rapid extinction of the Rocky Mountain locust Melanoplus spretus during the same period 58 It has also been suggested that after the population was thinned out it would be harder for few or solitary birds to locate suitable feeding areas 16 In addition to the birds killed or driven away by hunting during breeding seasons many nestlings were also orphaned before being able to fend for themselves Other less convincing contributing factors have been suggested at times including mass drownings Newcastle disease and migrations to areas outside their original range 2 32 The extinction of the passenger pigeon aroused public interest in the conservation movement and resulted in new laws and practices which prevented many other species from becoming extinct 38 The rapid decline of the passenger pigeon has influenced later assessment methods of the extinction risk of endangered animal populations The International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN has used the passenger pigeon as an example in cases where a species was declared at risk for extinction even though population numbers are high 141 Naturalist Aldo Leopold paid tribute to the vanished species in a monument dedication held by the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology at Wyalusing State Park Wisconsin which had been one of the species social roost sites 163 Speaking on May 11 1947 Leopold remarked Men still live who in their youth remember pigeons Trees still live who in their youth were shaken by a living wind But a decade hence only the oldest oaks will remember and at long last only the hills will know 164 Potential resurrection of the species edit nbsp Taxidermied male and female Laval University LibraryToday at least 1 532 passenger pigeon skins along with 16 skeletons are in existence spread across many institutions all over the world 36 37 It has been suggested that the passenger pigeon should be revived when available technology allows it a concept which has been termed de extinction using genetic material from such specimens In 2003 the Pyrenean ibex Capra pyrenaica pyrenaica a subspecies of the Spanish ibex was the first extinct animal to be cloned back to life the clone lived for only seven minutes before dying of lung defects 165 166 A hindrance to cloning the passenger pigeon is the fact that the DNA of museum specimens has been contaminated and fragmented due to exposure to heat and oxygen American geneticist George M Church has proposed that the passenger pigeon genome can be reconstructed by piecing together DNA fragments from different specimens The next step would be to splice these genes into the stem cells of rock pigeons or band tailed pigeons which would then be transformed into egg and sperm cells and placed into the eggs of rock pigeons resulting in rock pigeons bearing passenger pigeon sperm and eggs The offspring of these would have passenger pigeon traits and would be further bred to favor unique features of the extinct species 165 167 168 The idea is currently being pursued by American non profit organization Revive amp Restore 169 The general idea of re creating extinct species has been criticized since the large funds needed could be spent on conserving currently threatened species and habitats and because conservation efforts might be viewed as less urgent In the case of the passenger pigeon since it was very social it is unlikely that enough birds could be created for revival to be successful and it is unclear whether there is enough appropriate habitat left for its reintroduction Furthermore the parent pigeons that would raise the cloned passenger pigeons would belong to a different species with a different way of rearing young 165 167 Bibliography editNotes edit John Herald a bluegrass singer wrote a song dedicated to the extinction of the species and Martha the species endling that he titled Martha Last of the Passenger Pigeons 104 105 In connection with the centennial of Martha s death the song was cited as evidence of her iconic stature a symbol of the wanton slaughter of these pigeons and the human caused extinction of the species 106 107 References edit Ectopistes Swainson 1827 passenger pigeon PBDB a b c BirdLife International 2019 Ectopistes migratorius IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T22690733A152593137 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T22690733A152593137 en Retrieved November 19 2021 Ectopistes migratorius NatureServe Explorer 2 0 explorer natureserve org Retrieved March 31 2022 Henninger W F 1902 A Preliminary List of the Birds of Middle Southern Ohio The Wilson Bulletin 14 3 77 93 ISSN 0043 5643 JSTOR 4153807 Catesby M 1729 Natural History of Carolina Florida and the Bahama Islands Vol 1 London W Innys and R Manby p 23 Aldrich J W 1993 Classification and Distribution In Baskett T S Sayre M W Tomlinson R E Mirarchi R E eds Ecology and management of the Mourning Dove Harrisburg PA Stackpole Books p 48 ISBN 978 0 8117 1940 7 a b Hemming F 1952 Proposed use of the plenary powers to secure that the name Columba migratoria Linnaeus 1766 shall be the oldest available name for the Passenger Pigeon the type species of the genus Ectopistes Swainson 1827 Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 9 80 84 doi 10 5962 bhl part 10238 a b Oberholser H C 1918 The scientific name of the Passenger Pigeon Science 48 1244 445 Bibcode 1918Sci 48 445O doi 10 1126 science 48 1244 445 PMID 17752099 S2CID 28529631 Swainson W J 1827 Mr Swainson on several new groups in Ornithology The Zoological Journal 3 362 Bangs O 1906 The names of the passenger pigeon and the mourning dove Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 19 43 44 Schenk E T McMasters J H 1956 Procedure in Taxonomy Third ed Stanford California Stanford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 8047 3867 5 Ray Clayton E Bohaska David J 2001 Miocene and Pliocene birds from the Lee Creek Mine North Carolina in Geology and Paleontology of the Lee Creek Mine North Carolina III Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology 90 90 299 300 doi 10 5479 si 00810266 90 1 hdl 10088 2006 a b Blockstein 2002 p 4 Miller W J January 16 1969 The Biology and Natural History of the Mourning Dove Should Doves be Hunted in Iowa Ames IA Ames Audubon Society Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved April 23 2013 Brewer T M 1840 Wilson s American Ornithology with Notes by Jardine to which is Added a Synopsis of American Birds Including those Described by Bonaparte Audubon Nuttall and Richardson Boston Otis Broaders and Company p 717 a b c d e f g h Hume J P Walters M 2012 Extinct Birds London T amp AD Poyser pp 144 146 ISBN 978 1 4081 5725 1 Shapiro B Sibthorpe D Rambaut A Austin J Wragg G M Bininda Emonds O R P Lee P L M Cooper A 2002 Flight of the Dodo PDF Science 295 5560 1683 doi 10 1126 science 295 5560 1683 PMID 11872833 a b c Fulton T L Wagner S M Fisher C Shapiro B 2012 Nuclear DNA from the Extinct Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius Confirms a Single Origin of New World Pigeons Annals of Anatomy 194 1 52 7 doi 10 1016 j aanat 2011 02 017 PMID 21482085 a b c Johnson K P Clayton D H Dumbacher J P Fleischer R C 2010 The flight of the Passenger Pigeon phylogenetics and biogeographic history of an extinct species Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 57 1 455 8 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2010 05 010 PMID 20478386 Fulton T L Wagner S M Shapiro B 2012 Case Study Recovery of Ancient Nuclear DNA from Toe Pads of the Extinct Passenger Pigeon Ancient DNA Methods in Molecular Biology Vol 840 pp 29 35 doi 10 1007 978 1 61779 516 9 4 ISBN 978 1 61779 515 2 PMID 22237518 Hung C M Lin R C Chu J H Yeh C F Yao C J Li S H 2013 The De Novo Assembly of Mitochondrial Genomes of the Extinct Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius with Next Generation Sequencing PLOS One 8 2 e56301 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 856301H doi 10 1371 journal pone 0056301 PMC 3577829 PMID 23437111 Deane R 1908 The Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius in Confinement The Auk 25 2 181 183 doi 10 2307 4070695 JSTOR 4070695 Atkinson G E 1907 Mershon W B ed The Passenger Pigeon New York The Outing Publishing Co p 188 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Fuller E 2014 The Passenger Pigeon Princeton and Oxford Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16295 9 pp 30 47 Harper D 2012 Passenger n Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved April 23 2013 Schorger A W 1955 The Passenger Pigeon Its Natural History and Extinction Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 1 930665 96 5 p 251 Schorger 1955 pp 252 253 Tatum J Rementer J the Culture Preservation Committee 2010 Extinct Birds the Lenape Knew Culture and History of the Delaware Tribe Delaware Tribe of Indians Archived from the original on October 6 2012 Retrieved April 23 2013 Omiimii Ojibwe People s Dictionary Department of American Indian Studies University of Minnesota Retrieved March 2 2012 Costa D J 2005 Wolfart H C ed The St Jerome Dictionary of Miami Illinois PDF Papers of the 36th Algonquian Conference Winnipeg University of Manitoba pp 107 133 Archived from the original PDF on June 11 2016 Retrieved April 23 2013 Schorger 1955 p 255 a b c d e f g h i Fuller 2014 pp 72 88 Fuller 2014 pp 150 161 a b c d Blockstein 2002 p 2 a b c d e f Gibbs D Barnes E Cox J 2001 Pigeons and Doves A Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World Sussex Pica Press pp 318 319 ISBN 978 1 873403 60 0 a b c d Greenway J C 1967 Extinct and Vanishing Birds of the World New York American Committee for International Wild Life Protection 13 pp 304 311 ISBN 978 0 486 21869 4 a b Hume J P van Grouw H 2014 Colour aberrations in extinct and endangered birds Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 134 168 193 a b c d e Department of Vertebrate Zoology National Museum of Natural History March 2001 The Passenger Pigeon Encyclopedia Smithsonian Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on March 13 2012 Retrieved April 22 2013 a b Fuller 2014 pp 162 168 Shufeldt R W 1914 Osteology of the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius The Auk 31 3 358 362 doi 10 2307 4071953 JSTOR 4071953 a b c Shufeldt R W 1915 Anatomical and other notes on the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius lately living in the Cincinnati Zoological Gardens The Auk 32 1 29 41 doi 10 2307 4071611 JSTOR 4071611 a b c d Blockstein 2002 p 8 a b c d e Fuller E 2001 Extinct Birds Revised ed Ithaca New York Comstock Publishing Associates pp 96 97 ISBN 978 0 8014 3954 4 a b c Craig W 1911 The expressions of emotion in the pigeons III The Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius Linn The Auk 4 28 4 408 427 doi 10 2307 4071160 JSTOR 4071160 a b c d Blockstein 2002 p 3 a b c Blockstein 2002 p 5 a b c d e Blockstein 2002 p 6 Howard H 1937 A Pleistocene Record of the Passenger Pigeon in California Condor 39 1 12 14 doi 10 2307 1363481 JSTOR 1363481 Chandler R M 1982 A Second Pleistocene Passenger Pigeon from California PDF Condor 84 2 242 doi 10 2307 1367681 JSTOR 1367681 a b c Audubon J J 1835 Ornithological biography or an account of the Habits of the Birds of the United States of America Vol 1 Edinburgh A Black pp 319 327 a b c d e f Blockstein D E 2002 Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius In Poole A Gill F eds The Birds of North America Philadelphia The Birds of North America Inc Cornell Lab of Ornithology p 611 Retrieved March 3 2016 p 9 a b c d e f Blockstein 2002 p 10 a b Schorger 1955 p 205 a b c d e f Ellsworth J W McComb B C 2003 Potential Effects of Passenger Pigeon Flocks on the Structure and Composition of Presettlement Forests of Eastern North America Conservation Biology 17 6 1548 1558 doi 10 1111 j 1523 1739 2003 00230 x S2CID 55427679 General Notes Thoreau s Notes on the Passenger Pigeon The Auk 28 1 111 1911 Sullivan J Sutton B Cronon W April 2004 The Passenger Pigeon Once There Were Billions Hunting for Frogs on Elston and Other Tales from Field amp Street Chicago Illinois pp 210 213 ISBN 978 0 226 77993 5 Retrieved February 29 2012 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h i j Fuller 2014 pp 50 69 a b c d e Hung C M Shaner P J L et al 2014 Drastic population fluctuations explain the rapid extinction of the passenger pigeon Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 29 10636 10641 Bibcode 2014PNAS 11110636H doi 10 1073 pnas 1401526111 PMC 4115547 PMID 24979776 Williams S C P 2014 Humans not solely to blame for passenger pigeon extinction Science amp AAAS American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved June 17 2014 Mann Charles C 2011 The Artificial Wilderness 1491 New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus 2nd ed New York Vintage pp 365 367 a b c d Murray G G R Soares A E R et al 2017 Natural selection shaped the rise and fall of passenger pigeon genomic diversity PDF Science 358 6365 951 954 Bibcode 2017Sci 358 951M doi 10 1126 science aao0960 hdl 11250 2480523 PMID 29146814 S2CID 4779202 a b Pennisi Elizabeth November 16 2017 Four billion passenger pigeons vanished Their large population may have been what did them in Science amp AAAS American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved March 4 2018 SciShow July 2 2018 Why Billions of Passenger Pigeons Died in Under a Century archived from the original on December 11 2021 retrieved February 15 2019 Achenbach Joel November 16 2017 Billions or bust New genetic clues to the extinction of the passenger pigeon The Washington Post Atkinson Q D Gray R D Drummond A J 2008 mtDNA variation predicts population size in humans and reveals a major southern Asian chapter in human prehistory Molecular Biology and Evolution 25 2 468 474 doi 10 1093 molbev msm277 PMID 18093996 Biraben J N 1979 Essai sur l evolution du nombre des hommes Essay on the evolution of numbers of mankind Population French Edition 34 1 13 25 doi 10 2307 1531855 JSTOR 1531855 Sackton Timothy B Hartl Daniel L Corbett Detig Russell B April 10 2015 Natural selection constrains neutral diversity across a wide range of species PLOS Biology 13 4 e1002112 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1002112 PMC 4393120 PMID 25859758 Przeworski Molly Andolfatto Peter Venkat Aarti Segurel Laure Meyer Wynn K Matute Daniel R Bullaughey Kevin Leffler Ellen M September 11 2012 Revisiting an old riddle what determines genetic diversity levels within species PLOS Biology 10 9 e1001388 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001388 PMC 3439417 PMID 22984349 a b c d e f Blockstein 2002 p 15 a b Novak B J Estes J A Shaw H E Novak E V Shapiro B 2018 Experimental investigation of the dietary ecology of the extinct passenger pigeon Ectopistes migratorius Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 6 doi 10 3389 fevo 2018 00020 McCauley D J Hardesty Moore M et al 2016 A mammoth undertaking harnessing insight from functional ecology to shape de extinction priority setting PDF Functional Ecology 31 5 1008 1009 doi 10 1111 1365 2435 12728 S2CID 19791653 Hutchinson Todd F Yaussy Daniel A Long Robert P Rebbeck Joanne Sutherland Elaine Kennedy December 2012 Long term 13 year effects of repeated prescribed fires on stand structure and tree regeneration in mixed oak forests Forest Ecology and Management 286 87 100 doi 10 1016 j foreco 2012 08 036 ISSN 0378 1127 Buchanan M L Hart J L 2012 Canopy disturbance history of old growth Quercus alba sites in the eastern United States Examination of long term trends and broad scale patterns Forest Ecology and Management 267 267 28 39 doi 10 1016 j foreco 2011 11 034 Ostfeld Richard S Jones Clive G Wolff Jerry O 1996 Of Mice and Mast BioScience 46 5 323 doi 10 2307 1312946 JSTOR 1312946 S2CID 89496723 Blockstein D E 1998 Lyme Disease and the Passenger Pigeon Science 279 5358 1831c 1831 Bibcode 1998Sci 279 1831B doi 10 1126 science 279 5358 1831c PMID 9537894 S2CID 45065236 Ceballos G Ehrlich A H Ehrlich P R 2015 The Annihilation of Nature Human Extinction of Birds and Mammals Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 33 35 ISBN 978 1 4214 1718 9 via Open Edition a b c Blockstein 2002 p 7 Neumann T W 1985 Human wildlife competition and the passenger pigeon Population growth from system destabilization Human Ecology 13 4 389 410 doi 10 1007 BF01531152 S2CID 153426755 a b c d Blockstein 2002 p 11 a b Blockstein 2002 p 12 a b c d Blockstein 2002 p 13 a b c Blockstein 2002 p 14 Darwin Charles Wallace Alfred Russel 1858 On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 3 9 46 62 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1858 tb02500 x retrieved January 14 2007 Clayton D H Price R D 1999 Taxonomy of New World Columbicola Phthiraptera Philopteridae from the Columbiformes Aves with descriptions of five new species PDF Annals of the Entomological Society of America 92 5 675 685 doi 10 1093 aesa 92 5 675 Archived from the original PDF on April 25 2012 Retrieved December 3 2011 a b Price R D Clayton D H Adams R J 2000 Pigeon Lice Down Under Taxonomy of Australian Campanulotes Phthiraptera Philopteridae with a description of C durdeni n sp PDF Journal of Parasitology 86 5 948 950 doi 10 2307 3284803 JSTOR 3284803 PMID 11128516 Archived from the original PDF on June 10 2010 Retrieved December 3 2011 a b Greenberg 2014 pp 31 35 Goodyear Albert C 2005 Evidence of Pre Clovis Sites in the Eastern United States Paleoamerican Origins Beyond Clovis 103 112 Novak Ben J 2016 Deciphering The Ecological Impact of the Passenger Pigeon A Synthesis of Paleogenetics Paleoecology Morphology and Physiology PDF UC Santa Cruz pp 10 11 Abrams Marc D Nowacki Gregory J 2008 Native Americans as active and passive promoters of mast and fruit trees in the eastern USA The Holocene 18 7 1123 1137 Bibcode 2008Holoc 18 1123A doi 10 1177 0959683608095581 S2CID 128836416 Delcourt Paul A Delcourt Hazel R 2004 Prehistoric Native Americans and Ecological Change Human Ecosystems in Eastern North America Since the Pleistocene Cambridge Studies in Ecology 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66270 3 Little Silas 1974 7 Effects on Forests Northeastern United States I Frequency and Type of Presettlement Fires In Kozlowski T T Ahlgren C E eds Fire and Ecosystems New York Academic Press p 226 ISBN 978 0 12 424255 5 Thompson D Q amp Smith R H 1971 The forest primeval in the northeast a great myth PDF Proceedings Annual 10th Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference a quest for ecological understanding Fredericton New Brunswick Canada Tallahassee FL Tall Timbers Research pp 261 265 Greenberg 2014 p 34 Llamas B Fehren Schmitz L et al 2016 Ancient mitochondrial DNA provides high resolution time scale of the peopling of the Americas Science Advances 2 4 1 10 Bibcode 2016SciA 2E1385L doi 10 1126 sciadv 1501385 PMC 4820370 PMID 27051878 a b Schorger 1955 p 135 a b Schorger 1955 p 136 Edey M December 22 1961 Once there were billions now there are none Life Vol 51 no 25 pp 169 176 ISSN 0024 3019 Retrieved June 16 2015 Schorger 1955 p 12 Schorger 1955 pp 132 133 Schorger 1955 p 132 a b Fuller 2014 pp 124 147 Shufeldt R W 1921 Published figures and plates of the extinct passenger pigeon Scientific Monthly 5th ed 12 5 458 481 Bibcode 1921SciMo 12 458S Milner R 2012 Charles R Knight The Artist Who Saw Through Time New York Abrams Books p 138 ISBN 978 0 8109 8479 0 Herald J Lyrics to Martha Last of the Passenger Pigeons Johnherald com Retrieved April 28 2013 Gebhart Parrish October 17 2010 Martha Last of the Passenger Pigeons video YouTube Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved December 12 2013 Harvey C Newbern E August 29 2014 13 Memories of Martha the Last Passenger Pigeon Audubon Magazine Retrieved March 3 2016 McLendon R September 1 2011 Ode to Martha the last passenger pigeon Mother Nature Network Retrieved March 3 2016 One of eastern North America s most iconic animals vanished forever on Sept 1 1914 Now 97 years later the passenger pigeon has become an icon for something else manmade extinction Kyne P M Adams V M 2016 Extinct flagships linking extinct and threatened species Oryx 51 3 471 476 doi 10 1017 S0030605316000041 a b Schorger 1955 p 129 Schorger 1955 pp 133 134 Schorger 1955 p 137 Schorger 1955 p 139 a b Schorger 1955 p 168 Schorger 1955 p 134 Laudonniere Rene de Goulaine de 1853 L histoire notable de la Floride situee es Indes Occidentales contenant les trois voyages faits en icelle par certains Capitaines et Pilotes francois Paris Chez P Jannet p 136 MacNamara Charles Miller G A ed Champlain as a Naturalist The Canadian Field Naturalist Vol XL no 6 Ottawa Graphic Publishers p 127 McCarthy Kevin M 1994 Twenty Florida Pirates Sarasota FL Pineapple Press p 16 ISBN 978 1 56164 050 8 its leader Rene de Laudonniere had been there 200 soldiers without relief over a year since June 1564 Mann C C 2005 The Artificial Wilderness 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus New York Alfred A Knopf pp 315 318 ISBN 978 1 4000 4006 3 Schorger 1955 p 130 a b Schorger 1955 p 131 a b Schorger 1955 p 144 a b Schorger 1955 p 186 Schorger 1955 p 193 Schorger 1955 p 192 Schorger 1955 p 198 a b c d e Hume J P 2015 Large scale live capture of Passenger Pigeons Ectopistes migratorius for sporting purposes overlooked illustrated documentation Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 2 135 174 184 Schorger 1955 p 169 Schorger 1955 p 172 Schorger 1955 p 170 Schorger 1955 pp 177 179 Paxson H D 1917 The last of the Wild Pigeon in Bucks County Collection of Papers Read Before the Bucks County Historical Society 4 367 382 Schorger 1955 p 173 Schorger 1955 p 141 a b Yeoman B 2014 Why the Passenger Pigeon Went Extinct Audubon Magazine Archived from the original on January 21 2015 Retrieved August 26 2014 Schorger 1955 p 142 Schorger 1955 p 167 Schorger 1955 p 145 a b Ehrlich P R Dobkin D S Wheye D 1988 The Passenger Pigeon Stanford University Retrieved March 3 2012 Schorger 1955 p 146 Whaples R 2015 A Feathered River Across the Sky The Passenger Pigeon s Flight to Extinction The Independent Review 19 3 443 6 a b Jackson J A Jackson B 2007 Extinction the Passenger Pigeon last hopes letting go The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 119 4 767 772 doi 10 1676 1559 4491 2007 119 767 etpplh 2 0 co 2 JSTOR 20456089 S2CID 85830808 Hornaday W T 1913 Our Vanishing Wild Life Its Extermination and Preservation New York Charles Scribner s Sons Retrieved February 29 2012 at Project Gutenberg Greenberg Joel 2014 A Feathered River Across the Sky The Passenger Pigeon s Flight to Extinction New York Bloomsbury USA ISBN 978 1 62040 534 5 Reeve S March 2001 Going Down in History Geographical 73 3 60 64 ISSN 0016 741X Wetmore A October 1936 Game Birds of Prairie Forest and Tundra National Geographic p 495 McKinley D 1960 A History of the Passenger Pigeon in Missouri Auk 77 4 399 420 doi 10 2307 4082414 JSTOR 4082414 Theodore Roosevelt Signed Archive Passenger Pigeons Raab Collection The Raab Collection Retrieved March 12 2023 TR Center ImageViewer www theodorerooseveltcenter org Retrieved March 12 2023 Stukel E D January February 2005 Passenger Pigeon South Dakota Game Fish amp Parks Retrieved August 7 2016 Reward for Wild Pigeons Ornithologists Offer 3 000 for the Discovery of Their Nests PDF The New York Times Boston Massachusetts April 4 1910 Retrieved February 29 2012 a b c d e f g Fuller 2014 pp 92 121 Rothschild W 1907 Extinct Birds London Hutchinson amp Co pp 167 170 a b Schorger 1955 p 28 D Elia J 2010 Evolution of Avian Conservation Breeding with Insights for Addressing the Current Extinction Crisis Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management 1 2 189 210 doi 10 3996 062010 JFWM 017 Schorger 1955 p 27 Shell H R May 2004 The Face of Extinction Natural History 113 4 72 ISSN 0028 0712 Schorger 1955 p 29 Schorger 1955 p 30 Last Passenger Pigeon Dies El Paso Morning Times El Paso Texas September 14 1914 p 6 Martha Passenger Pigeon Memorial Hut Roadside America Cincinnati Ohio Retrieved February 29 2012 Halliday T 1980 The extinction of the passenger pigeon Ectopistes migratorius and its relevance to contemporary conservation Biological Conservation 17 2 157 162 doi 10 1016 0006 3207 80 90046 4 Passenger Pigeon Allee effect kevintshoemaker github io Retrieved September 25 2020 Passenger Pigeon Monument Wisconsin Historical Society December 2003 Retrieved January 22 2014 Leopold Aldo 1989 1949 A Sand County Almanac And Sketches Here and There New York Oxford University Press p 109 ISBN 0 19 505928 X a b c Lewis T 2013 How to bring extinct animals back to life NBC News Retrieved August 25 2013 Bringing Back the Passenger Pigeon Meeting convened at Harvard Medical School in Boston Long Now Foundation February 7 2013 Retrieved April 10 2015 a b Zimmer C 2013 Bringing them back to life National Geographic Archived from the original on December 12 2016 Retrieved October 29 2015 Landers J 2013 Scientists look to revive the long extinct passenger pigeon The Washington Post Retrieved November 6 2014 The Great Passenger Pigeon Comeback Retrieved August 10 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ectopistes migratorius at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Ectopistes migratorius at Wikispecies Project Passenger Pigeon Lessons from the Past for a Sustainable Future The Demise of the Passenger Pigeon as broadcast on National Public Radio s Day to Day 360 Degree View of Martha the Last Passenger Pigeon Smithsonian Institution Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Passenger pigeon amp oldid 1194039198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.