Research Sheds New Light on Passenger Pigeon Extinction

Natural fluctuations may explain how a species that once numbered in the billions went extinct.

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On September 1st, 1914, at 1 p.m., the last known Passenger Pigeon died in the Cincinnati Zoo. One hundred years later, recent research may shed new light on this most famous extinction in our history.

The back story is well known: in the early nineteenth century, there were literally billions of Passenger Pigeons across the Eastern forests of the United States. By 1900, there were none left in the wild. How did such a population collapse happen?

The new research used an ecological model to show that the number of wild Passenger Pigeons probably fluctuated naturally, as their primary foods—acorns and other nuts—also waxed and waned.

Analysis of DNA from Passenger Pigeons in museum collections also suggested that Passenger Pigeon numbers may have varied as much as a thousand-fold over time. Sometimes, there’d be a few million birds, sometimes the several billion seen by John James Audubon in the early 1800s.

So huge cycles in population size were normal for the Passenger Pigeon. And typ-ically, over time they’d rebound. But the pressures of living alongside increasing numbers of humans made that impossible this time around. Hunting on a vast scale, disruption of nesting areas, and habitat loss meant that there was no way back.

And the last Passenger Pigeon became a symbol of how easily we can devastate a seemingly boundless natural population.

For more about the Passenger Pigeon, go to BirdNote.org.

Music featured: "Our Town, The Red Pony Suite, El Salon, Mexico" performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, from "Copeland Conducts Copeland" 1975, Sony BMG. BirdNote Producer: John Kessler. Executive Producer: Dominic Black. © 2014 Tune In to Nature.org September 2014. Narrator: Mary McCann.