Monday, April 15, 2024

#NaPoWriMo 2024 day fifteen

Over a century ago the passenger pigeon was probably the most numerous bird in all the world; today it is extinct.

Incredible as it seems, it may have outnumbered all other birds in the United States combined—hundreds of species.

One authority, summing up the evidence, believes that in Audubon’s day there were nearly five billion passenger pigeons in the states of Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana alone!

From Newfoundland to Florida, early writers told of immense hordes.

The great columns in flight, extending for hundreds of miles, blotted out the sun and took as much as three days to pass.

Alexander Wilson, sometimes called the father of American ornithology, estimated a flock in Kentucky to contain 2,230,272,000 birds.

He considered this far below their actual numbers.

He reckoned that if each bird ate a half pint of acorns a day, their daily food consumption would be 17,424,000 bushels!

Similarly, Audubon estimated a flock near Louisville at 1,115,136,000 birds.

Accounts of the great roosts read like the tales of a romancer.

Trees broke under the weight of the pigeons; thousands of armed men slaughtered day and night and shipped countless barrels to the big cities where they rotted on the sidewalks for want of buyers.

The last immense nesting took place in Michigan in 1878.

During the next thirty years the remaining flocks dwindled until they were gone.

The last passenger pigeon in the world expired at the Cincinnati Zoo at 1:00 p.m. Central Standard Time, September 1, 1914.
 
it is difficult to imagine that
once the sky was so full that
now the sky is so empty
 
trees breaking under the weight
of all those hollowed bones
murmuring