Texarkana Gazette

Woodpecker video evidences species’ survival

- By Bill Bowden

New video evidence from Louisiana shows what appears to be an ivory-billed woodpecker in flight, according to the National Aviary in Pittsburgh.

Project Principali­s, a partnershi­p of independen­t researcher­s and the National Aviary, recently submitted the drone video on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service website. (The scientific name of the ivory-billed woodpecker is Campephilu­s principali­s.)

Monday was the last day in a public comment period over whether the ivory-billed woodpecker should be removed from the endangered species list and declared extinct.

On July 22, Mark Michaels, co-founder of Project Principali­s, shared the video with representa­tives of the Fish and Wildlife Service, said Molly Toth, a spokeswoma­n for the National Aviary. She said the video was shot in 2021.

Toth said the video was made available to the public for the first time on Thursday.

Besides the video, Michaels also submitted comments, a presentati­on and a paper titled “Multiple lines of evidence indicate survival of the Ivorybille­d Woodpecker in Louisiana” to the Fish and Wildlife Service at https://bit.ly/3vWXSPe.

“This new video showing an Ivory-billed Woodpecker — in flight, landing, and taking off — is exciting and informativ­e,” said Michaels. “It not only builds on our existing body of evidence gathered over many years of searching, it tells us more about behavior, and is among the clearest evidence to date of the survival of these elusive birds.”

Two of five sequential flights were included in the presentati­on, according to a news release.

An Alabama man has also presented video to the Fish and Wildlife Service that he says is of an ivory-billed woodpecker.

Bobby Harrison of Huntsville, Ala., won’t say where he shot the Oct. 17, 2020, video, but he said he’s seen ivory-billed woodpecker­s nine times, and eight of those sightings were at Bayou DeView in the Big Woods of east Arkansas.

A flurry of ivory-billed woodpecker sightings occurred at Bayou DeView in 2004-05.

The ivory-billed was once — and perhaps still is — America’s largest woodpecker. With its prominent beak and a wingspan of 30 inches, it was known as the “Lord God Bird” because people would exclaim “Lord God!” when it swooped down from the sky.

On Sept. 30, 2021, the Wildlife Service proposed removing the ivory-billed woodpecker, along with 22 other species, from the Federal List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife due to extinction.

A two-month public comment period was held late last year regarding all 23 species.

Then, a public hearing on the ivory-billed woodpecker was held Jan. 26, followed by a one-month extension of the public comment period for that species.

On July 7, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reopened the comment period for another month and extended its final decision by six months.

“Since the publicatio­n of the proposed rule to delist the ivory-billed woodpecker, there has been substantia­l disagreeme­nt regarding the interpreta­tion of the evidence that exists for the ivory-billed woodpecker,” according to a rule the Wildlife Service published July 7 in the Federal Register.

 ?? AP File Photo ?? An ivory-billed woodpecker specimen is on a display at the California Academy of Sciences on Sept. 24, 2021, in San Francisco.
AP File Photo An ivory-billed woodpecker specimen is on a display at the California Academy of Sciences on Sept. 24, 2021, in San Francisco.

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