Monday, February 22, 2021

Genetics leaves little doubt that humans wiped out passenger pigeons


Considering the vast numbers of passenger pigeons there were before humans started slaughtering them in vast numbers, it would be very surprising if humans weren't the cause of their extinction.

 

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2266486-genetics-leaves-little-doubt-that-humans-wiped-out-passenger-pigeons/?utm_source=nsday&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=NSDAY_040221

 

3 February 2021
By Christa Lesté-Lasserre

The eye-catching birds of North America that went extinct during the last century weren’t experiencing genetic decline before their disappearance – which suggests humans were probably responsible for their extinction.

“These charismatic species that went extinct in the early 1900s – and one of them in 1988 – appear to have been doing just fine historically over tens of thousands of years, until European colonisation [of North America],” says Brian Tilston Smith at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

 

The only parrot native to the US, along with a woodpecker, the passenger pigeon, the prairie chicken and a warbler, were among the colourful birds that once roved the New World in abundance before recently – and dramatically – dying out, says Smith.

To learn more about why they did so, Smith and his collaborators ran DNA sequencing on 100-year-old skin samples from conserved birds in the American Museum of Natural History, representing five recently extinct species: the heath hen (Tympanuchus cupido cupido), the passenger pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius), the ivory-billed woodpecker (Campephilus principalis), the Carolina parakeet (Conuropsis carolinensis), and the Bachman’s warbler (Vermivora bachmanii).


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It was only in the last few decades before their disappearance that the five extinct birds showed signs of loss of genetic diversity as they headed rapidly towards extinction, says Smith.

This points to human behaviour as the primary culprit, he says. European settlers cut down forests, killed crop-raiding birds, and shot birds for sport, and these activities correspond with the rapid decline in bird numbers.

Why such human activities drove some bird species to extinction and not others remains a mystery, says Smith. Some birds might have created more competition for crops, or have been easier to shoot, or needed larger and older forests to nest in. “The ones that went extinct tended to be larger, but a lot of large species survived,” he says.

 



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