Century After Extinction, Passenger Pigeons Remain Iconic—And Scientists Hope to Bring Them Back
The 100th anniversary of the death of Martha, last of her kind, finds biologists dreaming of preventing or reversing extinctions.
TO SEE ANIMATION:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/08/140831-passenger-pigeon-martha-deextinction-dna-animals-species/
Photograph
by Robb Kendrick, National Geographic Creative; Taxidermic specimen,
Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History,
Washington, D.C.
Published August 31, 2014
A hundred years ago on Monday, a once-mighty species became extinct.
At the Cincinnati Zoo, a passenger pigeon named Martha died at the age
of 29.
People coming to the zoo to see the last passenger pigeon
were disappointed by the bird, which barely budged off its perch. As
Joel Greenberg writes in his recent book A Feathered River Across the Sky,
some threw sand into its cage to try to force it to walk around. But on
that first day of September a century ago, Martha no longer had to put
up with such humiliations.
It was a quiet end to a noisy species. As recently as the
mid-1800s, deafening flocks of billions of passenger pigeons swarmed
across the eastern half of the United States. But they proved no match
for humans, whose rapidly advancing technology drove the birds to
extinction in a matter of decades.
Other species were also spiraling toward extinction in the
late 1800s, but the destruction of the passenger pigeon happened on full
public display. "It became the icon of extinction," says Mark Barrow, a historian at Virginia Tech and the author of Nature's Ghosts.
A hundred years later, the passenger pigeon remains iconic
and is inspiring extravagant new technological feats. One team of
scientists is even trying to bring the species back from extinction,
using genetic engineering and cloning. Others are analyzing bits of
passenger pigeon DNA to reconstruct its lost ways of life. (Read "Bringing Them Back to Life" in National Geographic magazine.)
And whether scientists are able to bring passenger pigeons
back or not, the birds may still offer lessons about keeping other
species from following it into oblivion.
Animation by Donald E. Hurlbert, Smithsonian Institution
A Technological Coup de GrĂ¢ce
It was hard for early naturalists to imagine that the
passenger pigeon could ever become extinct. But they didn't realize that
a technological revolution was about to hit.
"The telegraph allowed word to go out: 'The pigeons are here,'" says David Blockstein, a senior scientist at the National Council for Science and the Environment and a founder of Project Passenger Pigeon.
Thousands of hunters would then jump on newly built trains to ride out
to wherever the pigeons had settled and start slaughtering them.
The hunters weren't just killing the birds to feed their
families, however. Pigeons would be stuffed into barrels and loaded back
onto the trains, which would deliver them to distant cities, where
they'd be sold everywhere from open air markets to fine restaurants.
"Technology enabled the market," says Blockstein.
Soon this technology-driven slaughter was decimating the
passenger pigeon. Its decline was so worrisome that Congress passed the
Lacey Act, one of the first laws to protect wildlife in the United
States. The Lacey Act would eventually help protect many species, but for the passenger pigeon it came too late.
In 1900, the year in which the act was made into law,
naturalists spotted a single wild passenger pigeon in Ohio. They never
saw another one in the wild again.
For the next 14 years, the species clung to existence in a
few zoos. But the birds proved to be poor breeders in captivity. Martha,
the last of her kind, was barren.
DNA and De-Extinction
While technology spelled the doom of passenger pigeons,
some scientists believe they can use technology to bring the species
back. When Martha died, biologists didn't even know that genes are
encoded in DNA. Now they have the technology to extract DNA from
preserved passenger pigeons in museum collections.
In 2012, a group of scientists launched a project now dubbed the Great Passenger Pigeon Comeback to create cloned passenger pigeons—or at least birds genetically engineered to have passenger pigeon traits.
Two years later, on the hundredth anniversary of the
species' extinction, project scientists are still hard at work. But they
can't say when—or even if—the bird will fly again.
"It's all moving forward at the speed of science," jokes Ben Novak, a project member at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Novak and his colleagues can't extract an intact passenger
pigeon genome from museum specimens. So they're hoping they can do the
next best thing: retool the genome of a living bird species so that it
gives rise to a passenger pigeon.
The closest living relatives of passenger pigeons are band-tailed pigeons,
which live in the western United States. The project scientists hope
that their museum DNA fragments will include some unique sequences that
play important roles in producing passenger pigeons—whether they help
build the bird's distinctive wedge-shaped tail, its red breast, or its
ultra-social behavior. It may also be possible to look at living bird
species with some of these traits to pinpoint their genetic basis.
Once the scientists have created a passenger pigeon-like
genome, they will insert this altered DNA into reproductive cells in
band-tailed pigeon embryos. The birds will mature, mate, and lay eggs.
And out of those eggs will emerge passenger pigeons—or at least birds
that are a lot like the way passenger pigeons used to be.
Reverse-Engineering a Species
Just about every step in the plan for de-extinction will
take the project scientists into uncharted scientific territory. The
scientists can't start editing the band-tailed pigeon genome until they
have a map showing the location and sequence of all its genes. But no
such map exists, so Novak and his colleagues are building one.
Nor has anyone ever cloned a bird. Next year, the project
researchers hope to take some steps in that direction with preliminary
experiments on reproductive cells from band-tailed pigeons.
Even if the scientists end up with a brood of passenger
pigeon chicks in a few years, they will still be a long way from
successfully reestablishing the species. That's because the naturalists
who had the opportunity to observe passenger pigeons left a lot of open
questions about the natural history of the birds.
No one knows how much of the bird's social behavior is
instinctive from birth, for example, and how much they must learn from
older birds within an established flock. Nor does anyone know how big a
passenger pigeon population has to be to sustain itself, or what range
of ecosystems can support it.
Novak and his colleagues are investigating these questions,
too. "We are interested in figuring out when passenger pigeons reached
their highest numbers," he says. Seeing how much passenger pigeon DNA
varied among individuals over time can give him and his colleagues some
clues to the size of the pigeon population over the past few thousand
years. It's possible that the giant flocks that early naturalists wrote
about were a peak in a long-term cycle of giant booms and busts.
It's also possible that the flocks were an unprecedented
explosion brought on when Europeans pushed Native Americans out of the
bird's range. Understanding the pigeon's past could help Novak and his
colleagues give it a future.
Preventive Measures
Even if we never resurrect the passenger pigeon, however,
Blockstein sees many lessons in its disappearance that apply to
protecting threatened species today.
It's a mistake to assume that a species with a big
population is immune to extinction, for example. "The endangered species
category is really all based on numbers, rather than biology," he
explains. Even a species with billions of members may have a biological
Achilles' heel that makes it vulnerable to human pressure.
To appreciate a species' true risk, we have to understand
not just its biology, but also our own technological advances. In the
1800s, the new technology included the telegraph and trains. Now it
includes global positioning systems, cell phones, and huge fishing
vessels. "We have factory ships that can vacuum up the ocean," says
Blockstein.
A few years ago, Blockstein got a chance to meet Martha.
After she died, she was packed in a 300-pound block of ice and shipped
to the Smithsonian Institution, where she was dissected, stuffed, and
mounted. She was moved around over the years and taken off public
display in 1999.
This summer, Smithsonian curators brought her out again for
a new exhibit called "Once There Were Billions: Vanished Birds of North
America." You can see Martha yourself there; the exhibition will be on view until October 2015.
"You're filled with awe to see the last of its species,"
says Blockstein. "But there's so much more to the passenger pigeon than
this last individual that ended up living out her time in a cage."
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