All you need to know about the passenger pigeon, including why this once abundant bird went extinct

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Published: Thursday, 04 January 2024 at 12:47 PM


The passenger pigeon, an extinct American bird, was once so common that it flew over the deciduous forests of eastern North America in flocks numbering in the billions.

What were passenger pigeons?

Passenger pigeons were about the size of Europe’s stock dove and ate acorns, beech mast and chestnuts. Oaks and beeches produce bumper crops of seeds every few years, and those ‘mast’ years are synchronised over large areas of forest, so the pigeons were nomadic and each year sought out those forests with greatest mast abundance.

A pigeon that hatched on the East Coast in New York State, in a good year for acorns there, might next year nest farther inland where there was plentiful beech mast, perhaps in Michigan in the Great Lakes region.

In between it might have wintered well to the south in Georgia or Arkansas, where the autumn seedfall is not buried under deep winter snow.

From hatching until death, a passenger pigeon was always within sight of thousands, possibly millions, of other passenger pigeons that nested in colonies of sometimes hundreds of millions of pairs, fed in huge flocks that scoured the forest floor like living harvesting machines, and migrated as a group – their winter roosts were so dense that the sheer weight of birds broke large branches off mature trees.

It is very difficult for us to imagine this abundance, but many consistent accounts have survived until today.

The artist John lames Audubon painted the species for his magnificent Birds of America. He wrote of passenger pigeons as follows: “The air was literally filled with pigeons; the light of noonday was obscured as by an eclipse; the dung fell in spots. not unlike melting fakes of snow; and the continued buzz of wings had a tendency to lull my senses to repose

Audubon estimated that over a billion birds passed in three hours, and there are many other credible accounts of immense flocks taking several days to pass that could have numbered more than three billion. Unless all of the passenger pigeons had gathered into a single flock for each of these observers, then we can only wonder at what proportion of the whole population they saw. Previous estimates indicated that there might have been three to five billion individuals in total, but I wonder whether it could have been even higher, perhaps touching to billion after years of high productivity.

Recent genetic studies, albeit based on only three individual museum specimens, suggest that passenger pigeons might have undergone large natural population swings – as would be expected from a species whose food supply fluctuated wildly. But this genetic work has produced an estimate of about 300,000 birds for the average population size in historic times (that is, before hunting and habitat loss became intense), which is just one-ten-thousandth of the lowest 19th-century estimates. So even if eyewitness accounts were exaggerated, they differ substantially from the genetic information.

Do you believe the genetics or the ecology? It seems to me unlikely that a species whose largest recorded colony numbered over 100 million birds, at a time when it was highly persecuted and when its forest habitat had been greatly reduced, could have had an average population size of 300,000 in the absence of such persecution and in pristine forests. Something doesn’t add up.

Nevertheless despite its population ups and downs the passenger pigeon was still the most abundant bird the world has ever seen, only decades before extinction.

When did passenger pigeons go extinct?

The last passenger pigeons were lost from the wild in 1900, the species lived on in captivity until the very last one, named Martha, died at Cincinnati Zoo at lunchtime on September 1914.