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Extinct passenger pigeon
Extinct passenger pigeon









Feather identification with the Smithsonian Institution, to determine species and verify content of feather-filled bed coverings in the museum’s historical collections.CT scans (with MSU College of Veterinary Medicine), as part of MSU Museum-Department of Zoology feeding ecology research.Rasmussen, assistant professor of zoology and developer of Project AVoCet, Avian Vocalizations Center Soundscape recreation of Passenger Pigeon birdsongs, based on the work of exhibit curator Pamela C.Exhibitions like this mark the anniversary, promote the conservation of species and habitat, strengthen the relationship between people and nature, and foster the sustainable use of natural resources.Īlso featured in the exhibition – new and ongoing research and work at MSU: “They Passed Like a Cloud: Extinction and the Passenger Pigeon” is produced in association with Project Passenger Pigeon () in 2014, the centenary of this massive extinction. Once known for their extreme abundance, they are best remembered today for extreme lack of foresight in wildlife management. The last observed colossal nesting of birds was in Michigan, and it has been 100 years since we have seen the last living Passenger Pigeon. Incredibly, today Passenger Pigeons are completely gone, the victims of human hunting and exploitation. Chief Pokagon, last chief of the Michigan Potawatomi people, 1850 They passed like a cloud through the branches of the high trees, through the underbrush and over the ground. I was startled by hearing a gurgling, rumbling sound, as though an army of horses laden with sleigh bells was advancing through the deep forest… I beheld moving toward me in an unbroken front millions of pigeons.

extinct passenger pigeon

Their combined weight would often break tree limbs. The noise they created sounded like a violent thunderstorm. Huge flocks darkened the sky for hours.

extinct passenger pigeon extinct passenger pigeon

Once Earth’s most abundant bird – as many as 3-5 billion - it’s been estimated that one of every three North American birds was a Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius)!











Extinct passenger pigeon