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Millions of Missing Birds, Vanishing in Plain Sight

Posted: Sun Jun 24, 2007 5:29 am
by Trinity
By VERLYN KLINKENBORG
Published: June 19, 2007 New York Times

Last week, the Audubon Society released a new report describing the sharp and startling population decline of some of the most familiar and common birds in America: several kinds of sparrows, the Northern bobwhite, the Eastern meadowlark, the common grackle and the common tern. The average decline of the 20 species in the Audubon Society’s report is 68 percent.

Forty years ago, there were an estimated 31 million bobwhites. Now there are 5.5 million. Compared to the hundred-some condors presently in the wild, 5.5 million bobwhites sounds like a lot of birds. But what matters is the 25.5 million missing and the troubles that brought them down — and are all too likely to bring down the rest of them, too. So this is not extinction, but it is how things look before extinction happens...

The word “extinctâ€

Posted: Wed Jun 27, 2007 2:21 am
by ohareward
I was reading in a farming mag that Large Black Pigs were quite common in NZ and then people wanted whiter pork, so the breed went into decline. The bloke who rears them up in Nelson said they got down to ONE sow and TWO boars. The breed are now holding their own. I agree with you, that animals and birds that are near gone are not noticed until sometimes it is too late.

Robin