Ask Kenn Kaufman: Is the Ivory-billed Woodpecker Extinct?

Also this month: Do male Baltimore Oriole have their own distinct songs? And who would play you in a movie version of "Kingbird Highway"?

Who's Kenn? Simply put, Kenn is a national treasure. A renowned birder, author, and conservationist, Kenn Kaufman has spent his life dedicated to observing birds, reading about birds, writing about birds, and sharing the world of birds with others. With all that birdy knowledge in his brain, he also acts as the field editor for 探花精选 magazine. So, whenever we have a bird question stumping us around the office, we just ask Kenn. And now you can, too! If you have a bird or birding question you'd like Kenn to answer, leave them in the comments below or on Facebook. Maybe next month you'll get the kind of thorough, thoughtful, and even humorous response from Kenn we've grown so fond of over the years. 鈥擳he Editors             

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Question: Is the Ivory-billed Woodpecker extinct? 

Kenn Kaufman: I have an easy answer for that: yes and no.

And I鈥檓 totally serious. Let me explain.

No other North American bird has had such a tantalizing, frustrating history as the Ivory-billed Woodpecker. Large, spectacular, a symbol of American wilderness, it survived almost into the present era, almost long enough to be helped by the growing environmental movement and endangered-species laws. Almost, but not quite.

Of course, there have been reports of sightings (including well-publicized ones) in recent decades. I鈥檓 not here to dispute any particular one of them. I鈥檓 willing to believe that every one of those observers genuinely believed they saw an Ivory-bill; and maybe some of them were right. But I keep coming back to this fact: The last universally accepted photos of living Ivory-bills in the U.S. were taken more than 80 years ago, in Louisiana鈥檚 Singer tract in 1938.

In the legendary forests of the Singer Tract, the birds were reliably found by multiple observers as late as 1944. But after that . . . no one could pin the species down anywhere. Claimed sightings trailed off gradually, with reports from Florida, Georgia, Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas being made even into this decade. But somehow none could be fully documented.

If the bird still exists, why has proof been so elusive?

 

Some will argue that, 鈥淲ith so many reports, some of them have to be correct.鈥 But I don鈥檛 think that applies to Ivory-bills any more than it does to Bigfoot or UFOs or . The more unconfirmed reports there are, the more striking it becomes that none of them can be confirmed.

I鈥檝e heard theories that the species went through a rapid evolution in its behavior so that it now avoids humans and evades all attempts at photography. But that doesn鈥檛 make sense. In the American tropics, I鈥檝e seen several species that are close relatives, including Pale-billed, Crimson-crested, Magellanic, and Powerful Woodpeckers; they are wary, but they鈥檙e not freakishly, supernaturally so. Neither was the Ivory-billed when it was still around. When Roger Tory Peterson went to the Singer Tract with his friend Bayard Christy in 1942, it took them a day and a half to find two Ivory-bills, but then they were able to follow and observe them for almost an hour. In other words, these woodpeckers behaved like normal birds. It鈥檚 not plausible that the species would have abruptly evolved into an invisible creature so soon afterward.

Others point out that the Ivory-bill was known to be somewhat nomadic, moving around in response to big outbreaks of certain beetle larvae, and that this could make it harder to pin them down in a single location. This is true. But if some individuals were still hanging on, and moving around the countryside, it would increase the chance that birders would see them. There are a LOT of birders within the Ivory-bill鈥檚 historic range鈥攏ow more than ever before, in fact. Look at  for Pileated Woodpecker, another large and sometimes wary species, and you鈥檒l see sightings blanketing the southeastern states. There really aren鈥檛 any large gaps, except in areas of extensive farmland. The point isn鈥檛 that Pileateds are everywhere鈥攖he point is that birders are everywhere. It鈥檚 not plausible that the bigger, flashier Ivory-bill could slip through these regions unnoticed.

If Roger Peterson had carried one of our modern compact superzoom cameras into the Singer Tract in 1942, he positively could have gotten frame-filling shots. Today, as numbers of birders continue to increase, more and more of us are carrying cameras around. And there are legions of people out in the southern woods鈥攈ikers, turkey hunters, kayakers, etc.鈥攚ho don鈥檛 self-identify as birders, but who would whip out their cell phones and take a video if they saw a black-and-white woodpecker the size of a beagle. 

Year after year, we see no clear photos or videos, we hear no convincing, diagnostic recordings. Of course, it鈥檚 impossible to prove that the bird is gone鈥攜ou can鈥檛 prove an absence of something鈥攂ut after a while, you can start to make reasonable assumptions. In an objective analysis, I would say that, yes, I believe the Ivory-billed Woodpecker is extinct.

What if I鈥檓 wrong, though?

What if someone shows up tomorrow with clear and current photos, with unambiguous video of a living Ivory-bill? I鈥檒l tell you this: I would be thrilled to be proven wrong. I would be overjoyed. I would dance in the streets. I wouldn鈥檛 even care about going to see the bird myself; just knowing it still lived would make that the happiest day of my life.

That鈥檚 why I answered the question 鈥測es and no.鈥 My head says that the species is extinct, but my heart won鈥檛 accept that. In my dreams, the big woodpeckers are still out there, flying along some backwater swamp that the birders haven鈥檛 discovered. They鈥檙e still hitching their way up massive trunks of ancient trees, still greeting the dawn with strident cries and loud double-rap drumming that echoes through forests where no humans are listening. It doesn鈥檛 make sense, but at some level I believe it, and I will for as long as I live.  

Q: I swear I can tell my local male Baltimore Orioles apart just by their songs, which all seem to different. Am I fooling myself?

KK: Not at all; that鈥檚 a good observation.

The songs of male Baltimore Orioles are as rich as their colors: a series of throaty, full-toned whistles. The songs may include high notes, low notes, single notes, double notes, in a slow or fast pattern, elements given singly or in repetition. The variations seem endless. Unlike many birds, in which the differences among the songs of individual males are subtle and hard to detect without recording and analysis, the highly distinctive songs of each male Baltimore are obvious to anyone who listens closely. Every May, when migrating orioles arrive near my home in northern Ohio, I take delight in this aspect of the soundscape. Although it would be impossible to prove without having birds individually marked, I believe I have identified certain males returning to the area in more than one year, just on the basis of their unique songs.

Ornithologist Les Beletsky did on Baltimore Oriole songs in Michigan. He found that, indeed, most of the males in his study area could be readily separated by voice. All of them had more than one song pattern apiece, but most of those were just slight variations on that individual鈥檚 basic song, with only a few elements added or switched, so that the overall song pattern of that male remained recognizable.

Intriguingly, Beletsky found a few cases in which the males on immediately adjacent territories shared some identical songs. This raises some questions: Why? If there were an advantage to having a distinctive song, why would some neighbors pass that up that advantage? On the other hand, if there鈥檚 value in having similar songs shared by neighboring males鈥攁s happens in many bird species鈥攚hy do most local male Baltimore Orioles sound so different from each other?

As far as I know, those questions haven鈥檛 been addressed. Presumably these male orioles learn their songs, as with most other songbirds, but we don鈥檛 know details of how and when that happens. A study in Nebraska found that songs of first-year males differ slightly from those of adult males, so evidently the orioles continue to develop their songs for a while, rather than learning a fixed set of songs at an early age.

Incidentally, female Baltimore Orioles also sing, although less frequently. Usually their songs are relatively short, but some are as long and complex as those of males. An individual female typically doesn鈥檛 share notes used by her mate鈥攕he has her own songs. And studies of Bullock鈥檚 Oriole, the western replacement for the Baltimore, have suggested that females may sing more often than males of that species, at least early in the nesting season. So in listening to orioles we should avoid assuming that we鈥檙e hearing males; we need to look at the singers if we鈥檙e going to understand what鈥檚 going on.

 Q: In a film based on Kingbird Highway, who would play the part of you?

KK: Well, I appreciate the question, but many readers won鈥檛 know what it means. Kingbird Highway is a memoir I wrote. It wasn鈥檛 published until 1997, but it describes things that happened almost a quarter-century earlier, in the 1970s. As a rabidly intense young birder, I spent the latter part of my teenage years hitch-hiking around North America looking for new birds. Hitch-hiking was a common and easy way to travel then and it was all I could afford, so I went back and forth across the continent that way, living as cheaply as I could, following the migrations, learning about birds. In 1973, the year I turned 19, I tried to set a new 鈥淏ig Year鈥 record for North America. The record was only 626 species at that time, so attempting to break it by hitch-hiking wasn鈥檛 as outlandish as it would seem now, when serious contenders have to shoot for 800-plus.  

It was a wonderful experience. I wrote a long account of it shortly after the fact, but then put that aside until the mid-1990s, after I had written a couple of other books. Then I pulled out that old manuscript and spent a couple of years rewriting it.

Revised in hindsight, my teenaged adventures turned into a coming-of-age story and a snapshot of the burgeoning birding culture of the 1970s. To my surprise, Houghton Mifflin Company accepted the book and published it. To my further surprise, Kingbird Highway is still in print today, 23 years later. The honored it as a 鈥渃lassic鈥 in 2017.

So the book has been more successful than I could have hoped, but would it work as a film? So far, few movies have focused on birding. The best known undoubtedly is The Big Year, based on written by Mark Obmascik. The book, a true story, was excellent. The film, a highly fictionalized madcap comedy version, was okay. Knowing how badly Hollywood can screw things up, I think many birders were relieved that the film wasn鈥檛 as bad as it could have been.

, released in 2013, isn鈥檛 as widely known, but I think it鈥檚 a better film. I may be biased because I was a consultant on it, but director and co-screenwriter Rob Meyer had the grace to take the subject matter seriously. There鈥檚 plenty of humor, of course, but Meyer鈥檚 respect for birding, for his characters, and for the story shines through, making this a gem of a movie.

But back to the original question. If they made a film from my Kingbird Highway, who would act the part of me as a 19-year-old, and the other teenage birders who are prominent in the story? Someone would have to play my friend, the late Ted Parker, who at that time was already developing into one of the most brilliant field ornithologists ever. Maybe that would be a job for an actor who has already played demanding roles, like Dylan Minnette or Chandler Riggs. Someone would have to play Mark Robbins, another sharp field expert in his teens, and wildly expressive. Is Alex Wolff available? And we鈥檇 need someone smart and funny, with great comedic timing, to play Joel Greenberg, and someone who conveys quiet intensity to fill the role of Dave Hayward, a couple of great friends from the birding scene of that era.   

And who would play my character? With a question like this, the sky鈥檚 the limit, right? I nominate , lead singer for the band , winners of the Grammy for Best Rock Album in 2019. Josh Kiszka is 24 now but he looks young for his age, so he could be convincing in the role of a 19-year-old. As far as I know he hasn鈥檛 done any film acting yet, but he studied acting in school. He鈥檚 been influenced by the writings of Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, and he often includes themes of nature and peace in lyrics he writes for the band鈥檚 blasting hard-rock songs. Seeing his stage presence as a singer, I bet he鈥檚 a fine actor also, one who could breathe a lot of meaning into the role of a rebellious teenaged birder trying to find his place in the world.