For some high school students, after-school hours consist of soccer practice or debate club meetings. But for Angelic Henry and Regina Hashim, the fun starts when they鈥檙e hunting down almost 100-year-old dead birds in mothball-scented drawers and sifting through dusty field journals.
Since September, Henry, a Pelham Lab High School junior, and Hashim, who is 18 and homeschooled, have been working behind-the-scenes at New York City鈥檚 American Museum of Natural History (AMNH). Through the museum's Science Research Mentoring Program which gets high school students involved with research projects at AMNH, the pair visits twice a week to catalogue records from the Whitney South Sea Expedition, the longest ornithological research voyage in history.
In the early 1900s, the museum persuaded Harry Payne Whitney of the wealthy New York Whitney family to help fund the voyage to the South Pacific Islands, an area scientists had little knowledge of at the time. Over 15 years the crew of the expedition鈥攊ncluding bird collector Jos茅 Correia and ornithologist Rollo Beck鈥攕ailed to hundreds of islands, documenting biological findings and taking as many specimens as they could, from Brown Goshawk to Rarotong Starling to Shining Bronze-cuckoo. By the end, they'd amassed about 40,000 bird specimens鈥攁s well as plants and other animals鈥攁nd recorded their locations.
Though such an avian bounty wouldn't be collected today, it's now invaluable for understanding vast ecological changes that have occurred in this region. Some birds from the voyage, such as the Red-throated Lorikeet and the Moustached Kingfisher, are currently endangered largely as a result of increased logging on their home islands. 鈥淭hese data represent historic data points that will never exist again," says Paul Sweet, a collections manager in the ornithology department at the museum who has been combing through the Whitney collection. "This is like a recording of biological history."
But the problem is the data are a mess. Sometimes bird specimens are labeled with the wrong location, the island name is out-of-date, or the birds don鈥檛 have a specific location at all. Without location data, it鈥檚 difficult for today鈥檚 scientists to map past species鈥 distributions and to see how their ranges changed as the human footprint on these islands grew and global temperatures have warmed.
This is where Henry and Hashim come in. Under Sweet's guidance, the teenagers have organized and digitized more than 4,000 bird records collected from Tonga, Samoa, Cook Islands, and Kiribati during the Whitney expedition. 鈥淚n this region, there鈥檚 been all these huge agricultural undertakings and logging and stuff that鈥檚 been going on that鈥檚 changed the environment,鈥 Hashim says. 鈥淪o to be able to have this picture of the avian life prior to all of this is really valuable.鈥
Henry and Hashim spend most of their time delving into Correia and Beck鈥檚 journals, the ship鈥檚 logs, and a couple other collectors鈥 journals, finding notes on birds, locating the specific specimen in the museum鈥檚 collection, and fixing incorrect information in the database. Both agree the humanity of Correia and Beck displayed in their writing is the most fascinating part of their work.
鈥淵ou think they鈥檙e field journals so it鈥檒l be all data and stuff, but no, the collectors treated them like they were diaries,鈥 Henry says. 鈥淵eah, it鈥檚 90 percent completely frivolous and useless information,鈥 Hashim adds. 鈥淐orreia and Beck hated each other, and a lot of the journals is them just complaining.鈥
While members of the Whitney expedition team may have bickered, the trio at AMNH doesn鈥檛 have such problems. Besides clarifying century-old ornithological data, Sweet takes Hashim and Henry bird watching in Central Park and even taught them how to stuff their own specimens. The two Arctic Gulls the girls crafted now sit in the museum鈥檚 nearly 900,000-bird strong collection alongside Samoan Tooth-billed Pigeon and Paradise Kingfisher from the Whitney voyage. The gulls were collected from a more lackluster location, though鈥攖hey were shot at an airport.
This isn鈥檛 Sweet鈥檚 first time working with high school students: He has been reviewing the data for four years with other students helping him along the way. But, he says, there鈥檚 probably still another three or four to go before the Whitney data has been completely organized in an online database. The museum, working with partners, has also digitized pages of the field journals (view the scans ).
For the students, the most important thing they鈥檝e learned is to keep comprehensive, well-organized field journals. 鈥淪cience and scientists do get very messy,鈥 Henry says. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 just a bunch of random information, you鈥檙e not really going to get the results you want to get.鈥
Knowing the importance of maintaining good notes will be useful in Hashim鈥檚 and Henry鈥檚 futures: Both plan on continuing to study biology, life sciences, and conservation. 鈥淔rom all the birding Paul took us out to do, I catch myself looking around and spotting birds and being like, 鈥業 wonder what bird Paul would say that is,鈥 or, 鈥業 know that bird now,鈥欌 Henry says.
Correction: An earlier version of this story stated that Angelic Henry attended Lehman High School. She attends Pelham Lab High School. We regret the error.