Ghost Bird

Ghost Bird

Those looking for the elusive ivory-billed woodpecker would do well to listen to the locals.

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The source: “Bottomland Ghost: Southern Encounters and Obsessions With the ­Ivory-­Billed Woodpecker” by Michael K. Steinberg, in Southern Cultures, Spring ­2008.

The ­ivory-­billed woodpecker has fascinated the public since Native Americans used the bird’s skins to carry medicine bundles and traded its remains as far north as Canada. John James Audubon compared the beauty of its stunning plumage and promin­ent bill to the works of Flemish painter Anthony Vandyke, and it inspired writers such as William Faulkner and Walker Percy. But relentless hunting and the disappearance of the ­ivory-­bill’s habitat in southern bottomland forests took their toll. The last documented sightings were in the ­1940s.

Over the years, bird experts and rural residents reported occasional sightings, but their claims were ridiculed, writes Michael K. Steinberg, a geographer at the University of Alabama. “Few die-hards seem capable of believing that anybody ­else—­whether a knowledgeable outdoors person or even a respected ornithologist—­could actually see or hear an ­ivory-­bill.” So when a team of scientists declared in 2005 that they had laid eyes on an ­ivory-­bill in eastern Arkansas, and produced a fuzzy 11-second video as evidence, there was much rejoicing about this “official” sighting. But skeptics have questioned whether the video shows the famous bird or its common, ­sim­ilar-­looking relative, the pileated woodpecker.

Such disputes are frequent in the scientific world. But because “the ­ivory-­bill is the Holy Grail among birders,” and because millions in federal money for conservation efforts hang in the balance, the debate stirs deep passions among both ornithologists and rural residents such as Steinberg’s neighbor who, after a few drinks, often threatens to “go into the swamp and ‘find that damn bird.’ ”

What really ruffles Steinberg’s feathers is the marginalization of locals who report glimpsing the elusive woodpecker. “These people are often far more familiar with the sights and sounds of deep swamps than aca­demics or birders who seldom ven­ture into southern bayous,” he says. Local hunters and fishers are also the most likely to brave the mosquitoes,  alligators, snakes, and prickly palmettos of the birds’ favored ­environment.

In preparing a book on the search for the ­ivory-­billed wood­pecker in Louisiana, Steinberg ran down many of the reported sightings. Photos are few, which is no surprise given the forbidding, dense terrain; the ­ivory-­bill’s reportedly fast, straight, ­duck­like flying pattern; and the likelihood that after generations of intense hunting, any surviving birds are probably selected to be wary of humans. But Steinberg concludes that the sightings are consistent enough to suggest that ­ivory-­bills still ­exist.

The next evidence of the ­ivory-­bill’s existence, he predicts, will be produced by “a rural resident who may have little experience or even interest in bird watching.” The birding world should prepare to take heed. To discount rural dwellers’ reports “is not only shortsighted, it may be detrimental to ­ivory-­bill preservation.”

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