Ghost of a Chance
How did the ivory-billed woodpecker, which was feared extinct, hang on all these years?
- By Scott Weidensaul
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
This is where most ivory-bill stories end; someone is certain he's seen one, but there are no witnesses, no photographs, no proof. This time was different. Two weeks later, Sparling was back, leading Tim Gallagher, of Cornell University's Lab of Ornithology, and Bobby Harrison, a photography professor from Alabama, who had been to Arkansas shortly before to check out earlier rumors. As Gallagher and Harrison paddled to the site of Sparling's encounter, an ivory-bill flapped out of the trees. They pointed and shouted; the woodpecker flared off and disappeared into the woods. Harrison, who had been searching for the ivory-bill for years, broke down in tears. Telling me the story a year later, he did so again.
Within weeks, one of the most intensive and secretive wildlife searches in history was under way, led by the Cornell Lab and the Arkansas chapter of the Nature Conservancy. More than 50 biologists took to canoes and kayaks, looked down from aircraft, or perched atop an 80-foot boom crane along the edge of the swamp. They hunched under camouflage netting in small blinds, and seeded the woods with automatic cameras and high-tech audio-recording devices.
For 14 months, the crew labored in often appalling conditions—winter's deep, bone-damp cold, and summer's heat, stifling humidity, swarming bugs and venomous cottonmouths. The searchers' families, in some cases even their spouses, knew nothing of the mission. A three-page memo, issued to each team member, advised how to deflect interest and quash rumors without actually lying. Over predawn coffee or late evening meals in local diners—anywhere other than the team's two base camps—mud-splashed crew members referred only to "the bird" or its code name, "Elvis." If anyone asked, they were simply doing a major biological inventory of the Big Woods.
My role in the drama was a minor one. The Nature Conservancy had hired me to document the search by writing an article for its magazine timed to coincide with the announcement of the bird's discovery. Although I'm now free to tell the story elsewhere, at the time I was constrained by the same pledge of secrecy as the rest of the crew. Everyone realized that if word leaked out, birders would stampede to the forest, hoping to add the woodpecker to their life lists, and greatly complicate the mission. They also knew that skeptics would demand ironclad proof in the form of photographs or recordings.
The secrecy also allowed the Nature Conservancy and Cornell to raise nearly $10 million and quietly buy up ivory-bill habitat, adding to the more than 120,000 acres of the Big Woods that the conservancy had already protected over the previous two decades. (The immense forest, about half of it now preserved as federal or state wildlife refuges, is also home to black bears and the world's largest wintering population of mallards.)
Getting proof of the ivory-bill's existence was harder than anyone expected. All told, team members glimpsed the bird fewer than two dozen times. (I wish I could say one of those glimpses was mine, but Elvis eluded me.) They made recordings of what sounded like the unique double-rap drumming of an ivory-bill, but pileated woodpeckers may, on rare occasions, make similar sounds. Likewise, the kent-kent calls caught on the automated recording units may have been an ivory-bill—or may have been an unusual blue jay call.
The clincher was a video made in April 2004 by David Luneau, a professor of electronics at the University of Arkansas and a member of the Big Woods search team. Luneau took me, moving silently in a canoe rigged with an electric trolling motor, to the spot where he and his brother-in-law got just three or four seconds of video as the ivory-bill flew away. Still, it was enough to clearly show the enormous patches of white on the rear half of the wings and bands of white on the back—proof that this was no mere pileated woodpecker.
Even after I had spent days in the forest, canoeing with team members or sitting quietly alone on an observation platform, listening to the whooping of barred owls, I sometimes found it hard to believe the object of the hunt was real. One afternoon I was paddling with Martjan Lammertink, a woodpecker expert from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, when I noticed a tupelo tree trunk with a hole the size of a dinner plate chiseled into it, wood chips floating on the brown water below. When I asked if that was an ivory-bill's work, he shook his head. "No," he said, "when an ivory-bill cuts, it's more like a"—but I missed the rest of his reply. The simple fact that he used the present tense to refer to a species synonymous with extinction short-circuited my ears.
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Comments (4)
You can just email me back if you need to for any reason. I don't care for this to really be a comment on this article...
I saw the ivory billed woodpecker in 1997 in the Tampa Bay Area of Florida. I saw it in a neighbors tree (very old and tall tree.) Woodpeckers used it ALL the time as a food source. One day, I didn't think to bring my camera out with me and I saw it. The bird was MASSIVE and beautiful. It's beak was beautifully prominent. I ran to get my camera, came back out and the bird was gone. Next, I rushed off to the local library to id the bird and I was 100% positive that it was an Ivory Billed Woodpecker.
Maybe even 7 years later was when I first found out it was instinct. This was when the first articles about the "new" discovery that I saw popped up. A friend of mine posted it for me, or emailed it to me. I remembered realizing that the book in the little library by my house was probably outdated and was printed when the birds were not yet considered extinct. They are around still. I'm amazed with such few sightings and this animal's continuing survival.
Posted by Ruby on October 29,2010 | 02:59 PM
There was a PAIR in the backyard of my home, located in West Monroe, Louisiana, this past weekend.
Posted by Connley Averitt-Lynn on July 10,2009 | 09:13 AM
It would do my heart good to find that these guys are not extinct. Keep looking. It is very unlikely that I would see one in central Texas but I keep my eyes open for them.
Posted by Bob Thompson on May 28,2008 | 06:15 PM
Are ghost real or just your imagination?
Posted by leonel pillogo on March 8,2008 | 10:15 PM