Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:21:18.022Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The importance of continued collecting of bird specimens to ornithology and bird conservation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2010

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Summary

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Because museum scientists and conservationists are natural allies in the struggle to preserve biodiversity, conflict over the legality, morality, and value of collecting scientific specimens is counterproductive. Modern bird specimens contain a variety of data, summarized briefly herein, that are applied to numerous questions concerning the biology of birds, many of which have direct and often critical relevance to conservation. In particular, continued collecting of specimens has been shown to be critical in determining species-level classification in birds; unless species limits are established correctly, conservation priorities cannot be established reliably. Objections to collecting specimens are summarized and discussed. Calculations are presented to show that the effect of collecting specimens on most bird populations is insignificant. Moral objections t o collecting specimens seem to reflect a lack of awareness of the extent and causes of natural mortality, as well as a failure to recognize the magnitude of unintentional mortality inflicted on bird populations by routine human activities. The reason why more specimens are needed than currently exist in museum collections is that most existing specimens lack the data needed for most kinds of modern analyses, and even common species are represented by inadequate samples for research. Reasons are given for why equivalent data cannot be obtained solely from living birds that are subsequently released. Objecting to collecting specimens because it sets a bad example for developing countries trying to establish an environmental ethic is counterproductive in that it draws attention away from the fundamental units of concern for conservation biology: the population, and the habitat that supports it. Biological specimens differ from some other scientific specimens (e.g. archaeological) in that they are renewable resources whose removal does not deplete a country's national heritage. Misconceptions about museum scientists and their motives are discussed. Regarding collecting permits, recommendations are presented concerning (1) numbers of specimens, (2) percentage of specimens left in the host country, (3) species composition, (4) deposition of specimens, and (5) processing permit applications. Regulating agencies are often overly enthusiastic i n restricting scientific collecting, which is the only kind of mortality that is so highly controlled and yet from which bird species might derive benefit, whereas the same or sister agencies often permit and even encourage activities that are responsible for massive mortality in bird populations. Given that (1) the goal of scientists, conservation agencies, and governments is protection of populations, not individual birds; (2) scientific collecting has no measurable impact on the vast majority of bird populations; (3) scientific specimens represent an important source of information on bird biology and conservation; and (4) existing scientific collections are largely inadequate for answering many questions that could be answered with greater numerical, seasonal, or geographic representation, then it follows that continued scientific collecting will benefit ornithology and conservation and should, therefore, be encouraged by conservation and government agencies.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Birdlife International 1995

References

Alberch, P. (1985) Museum collections and the evolutionary study of growth and development. Pp.2942 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ.Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Aldrich, J. W. and Weske, J. S. (1978) Origin and evolution of the eastern House Finch population. Auk 95: 528536.Google Scholar
Allen, G. A. and Cannings, R. A. (1985) Museum collections and life-history studies. Pp. 169194 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Allendorf, F. W. and Leary, R. F. (1986) Heterozygosity and fitness in natural populations of birds and mammals. Pp.5776 in Soule, M. ed. Conservation biology. Sunderland, Massachusetts, U.S.A.: Sinauer Associates.Google Scholar
Arnold, N. (1991) Biological messages in a bottle. New Scientist (August): 2527.Google Scholar
Atkins, N. and Heneman, B. (1987) The dangers of gill netting to seabirds. Amer. Birds 41: 1395–1403.Google Scholar
Avise, J. C. and Nelson, W. S. (1992) Molecular genetic relationships of the extinct Dusky Seaside Sparrow. Science 243: 646648.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, A. J. (1985) Museum collections and the study of geographic variation. Pp.5578 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Baker, A. J., Peck, M. K. and Goldsmith, M. A. (1990) Genetic and morphometric differentiation in introduced populations of Common Chaffinches (Fringilla coelebs) in New-Zealand. Condor 92: 7688.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, R. J. (1994) Some thoughts on conservation, biodiversity, museums, molecular characters, systematics, and basic research. J. Mammalogy 75: 277287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banks, R. C., ed. (1979a) Museum studies and wildlife management. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Banks, R. C. (1979b) Human related mortality of birds in the United States. Washington, D.C.: Special Scientific Rep., Wildlife, No. 215, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.Google Scholar
Barlow, J. C. and Flood, N. J. (1983) Research collections in ornithology. Pp.3754 in Brush, A. H. and Clark, G. A. Jr, eds. Perspectives in ornithology. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrowclough, G. F. (1985) Museum collections and molecular systematics. Pp.4354 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Bartel, K. E. (1984) Barn Swallow fatalities due to mono-filament fishline. North Amer. Bird Bander 9: 8.Google Scholar
Baskin, Y. (1994) There's a new wildlife policy in Kenya: use it or lose it. Science 265: 733734.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beane, C. (1991) Ornithology versus aviculture. Bird Talk (June): 9495.Google Scholar
Benkman, C. W. (1989) On the evolution and ecology of island populations of crossbills. Evolution 43: 1324–1330.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Benkman, C. W. (1993a) Adaptation to a single resource and the evolution of crossbill (Loxia) diversity. Ecol. Monogr. 63: 305325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benkman, C. W. (1993b) Logging, conifers, and the conservation of crossbills. Conserv. Biol. 7: 473479.Google Scholar
Benkman, C. W. (1993c) The evolution, ecology, and decline of the Red Crossbill of Newfoundland. Amer. Birds 47: 225229.Google Scholar
Berthold, P. (1969) Die Laparotomie bei Vogeln. Zool. Garten 37: 271279.Google Scholar
Blem, C. R. (1975) Geographic variation in wing-loading of the House Sparrow. Wilson Bull. 87: 543549.Google Scholar
Bock, W. J. (1985) Adaptive inference and museological research. Pp.123138 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
British Trust for Ornithology (1993) Service in ornithology: Annual Report 1992-93. JNCC Report No. 204. Peterborough, U.K.: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.Google Scholar
Brittingham, M. C. and Temple, S. A. (1988) Avian disease and winter bird feeding. Passenger Pigeon 50: 195203.Google Scholar
Broughton, J. M. (1994) Size of the bursa of Fabricius in relation to gonad size and age class in Laysan and Black-footed albatrosses. Condor 96: 203207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnham, K. P. and Anderson, D. R. (1984)Tests of compensatory vs. additive hypotheses of mortality in Mallards. Ecology 65: 105112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burns, K. J. (1993) Geographic variation in ontogeny of the Fox Sparrow. Condor 95: 652661.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burtt, E. H. Jr and Tuttle, R. M. (1983) Effect on timing of banding on reproductive success of Tree Swallows. J. Field Orn. 54: 319323.Google Scholar
Chapman, A. (in press) Annual cycles of four bird species in tropical West Africa. Tropical Zool.Google Scholar
Chilgren, J. D. (1979) Drowning of grassland birds in stock tanks. Wilson Bull. 91: 345346.Google Scholar
Churcher, P. B. and Lawton, J. H. (1987) Predation by domestic cats in an English village. J. Zool. 212: 439455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cody, M. L. (19871) Ecological aspects of reproduction. Pp.462512 in Farner, D. S. and King, J. R., eds. Avian Biology, 1. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Colebrook-Robjent, J. F. R. (1976) Collecting capers. Bokmakierie 28: 4546.Google Scholar
Collar, N. J., Gonzaga, L. P., Krabbe, N., Madrono Nieto, A., Naranjo, L. G., Parker, T. A. III, and Wege, D. C. (1992) Threatened birds of the Americas: the ICBP/IUCN Red Data Book. Third edition, part 2. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation.Google Scholar
Colwell, M. A., Gratto, C. L., Oring, L. W. and Fivizzani, A. J. (1988) Effects of blood sampling on shorebirds: injuries, return rates, and clutch desertions. Condor 90: 942945.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Craig, T. H. and Powers, L. H. (1976) Raptor mortality due to drowning in a livestock watering tank.Condor 78: 412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croxall, J. P., Evans, P. G. H. and Schreiber, R. W. (1984) Status and conservation of the ivorld's seabirds. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation (Techn. Publ. 2).Google Scholar
Cruickshank, A. D. (1961) Sixty-first Christmas Bird Count. Audubon Field Notes 15: 8489.Google Scholar
Diamond, J. (1987) Justifiable killing of birds? Nature 330: 423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dittmann, D. L., Remsen, J. V. Jr, and Cardiff, S. W. (ms) Sexual differences in plumage color, and the prealternate molt in the Solitary Vireo Vireo s. solitarius. J. Field Orn. (submitted).Google Scholar
Dunne, P. (1988) Putting a dead bird to roost. Living Bird Q. (Spring): 38.Google Scholar
Ehrlich, P. R. and Wilson, E. O. (1991) Biodiversity studies: science and policy. Science 253: 758762.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ellegren, H. (1991) DNA typing of museum birds. Nature 354: 113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fetterolf, P. M. (1983) Effects of investigator activity on Ring-billed Gull behavior and reproductive performance. Wilson Bull. 95: 2341.Google Scholar
Fiala, K. (1979) A laparotomy technique for nestling birds. Bird-Banding 50: 366–367.Google Scholar
Fillmore, E. R. and Titman, R. D. (1977) Chipping Sparrow hanged. Canad. Field-Nat. 91: 69–70.Google Scholar
Finley, R. B. Jr (1987) The value of research collections. BioScience 37: 92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Finley, R. B. Jr (1988) Guidelines for the management of scientific collecting permits. Wildl. Soc. Bull. 16: 7579.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, J. W. (1985) The role of scientific collections in ecological morphology. Pp. 195208 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Fjeldså, J. (1980) Post-mortem changes in measurements of grebes. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 100: 151154.Google Scholar
Fjeldså, J. (1987) Museum collections of birds - relevance and strategies for the future. Ada Regiae Soc. Sci. Litt. Gothoburgensis Zool. 14: 213222.Google Scholar
Foster, M. S. (1975) The overlap of molting and breeding in some tropical birds. Condor 77: 304314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, M. S. (1982) The research natural history museum: pertinent or passe? Biologist 64: 112.Google Scholar
Foster, M. S. and Cannell, P. F. (1990) Bird specimens and documentation: critical data for a critical resource. Condor 92: 277283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frederick, P. C. (1986) Parental desertion of nestlings by White Ibis (Eudocimus albus) in response to muscle biopsy. J. Field Orn. 57: 168170.Google Scholar
Gill, F. B. (1995) Ornithology. Second edition. New York: W. H. Freeman and Co.Google Scholar
Goodman, S. M. and Lanyon, S. M. (1994) Scientific collecting. Conserv. Biol. 8: 314315.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, F. Jr (1992) The ordeal of Nat Wheelwright. Amer. Birds 46: 374377.Google Scholar
Graves, G. R. (1982) Speciation in the Carbonated Flower-piercer (Diglossa carbonaria) complex of the Andes.Condor 84: 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graves, G. R. (1987) A cryptic new species of antpitta (Formicariidae: Grallaria) from the Peruvian Andes. Wilson Bull. 99: 313321.Google Scholar
Graves, G. R. (1988) Phylloscartes lanyoni, a new species of bristle-tyrant (Tyrannidae) from the lower Cauca Valley of Colombia. Wilson Bull. 100: 529534.Google Scholar
Graves, G. R. (1993) Relic of a lost world: a new species of sunangel (Trochilidae: Heliangelus) from “Bogota”. Auk 110: 18.Google Scholar
Green, G. H. (1980) Decrease in wing length of skins of Ringed Plover and Dunlin. Ringing and Migration 3: 2728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenwood, A. G. (1983) Avian sex determination by laparoscopy. Vet. Rec. 112: 105.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Greenwood, J. G. (1979) Post-mortem shrinkage of Dunlin Calidris alpina skins. Bull. Brit Orn. Club 99: 143145.Google Scholar
Groth, J. G. (1993) Evolutionary differentiation in morphology, vocalizations, and allo-zymes among nomadic sibling species in the North American Red Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra) complex. Univ. California Publ. Zool. 127: 1143.Google Scholar
Grubb, T. C. (1989) Ptilochronology: feather growth bars as indicators of nutritional status. Auk 106: 314320.Google Scholar
Gruys, R. C. and Hannon, S. J. (1993) Sex determination of hunter-killed and depredated Willow Ptarmigan using a discriminant analysis. J. Field Orn. 64: 1117.Google Scholar
Hackett, S. J. and Rosenberg, K. V. (1990) Comparison of phenotypic and genetic differentiation in South American antwrens. Auk 107: 473489.Google Scholar
Hagan, J. M. and Reed, J. M. (1988) Red color bands reduce fledging success in Red-cockaded Woodpeckers. Auk 105: 498503.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haig, S. M. and Oring, L. W. (1988) Distribution and dispersal in the Piping Plover. Auk 105: 630638.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, G. D. and Martin, R. F. (1985) Investigator perturbation and reproduction of the Cliff Swallow. Auk 102: 167170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herremans, M. (1985) Post-mortem changes in morphology and its relevance to biometrical studies. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 105: 8991.Google Scholar
Hobson, K. A. (1987) Use of stable-carbon isotope analysis to estimate marine and terrestrial protein content in gull diets. Canad. J. Zool. 65: 12101213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobson, K. A. and Sealy, S. G. (1991) Marine protein contributions to the diet of Northern Saw-whet Owls on the Queen Charlotte Ilands: a stable-isotope approach. Auk 108: 437440.Google Scholar
C, Holden, ed. (1992) Ornithologists feel beleaguered. Science 258: 396397.Google Scholar
Houde, P. and Braun, M. J. (1988) Museum collections as a source of DNA for studies of avian phylogeny. Auk 105: 773776.Google Scholar
Houde, P., Sheldon, F. H. and Kreitman, M. (in press) A comparison of solution and membrane-bound DNA x DNA hybridization, as used to infer phylogeny. J. Molecular Evol.Google Scholar
Hunt, G. L. Jr (1972) Influence of food distribution and human disturbance on the reproductive success of Herring Gulls. Ecology 53: 10511061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ICBP (1992) Putting biodiversity on the map: priority areas for global conservation. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation.Google Scholar
Jackson, J. A. (1981) Screech Owl caught in nylon Lichtenstein's Oriole nest. Southwest. Nat. 26: 214215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
James, H. F., Zusi, R. L. and Olson, S. L. (1989) Dysmorodrepanis munroi (Fringillidae: Drepanidini), a valid genus and species of Hawaiian finch. Wilson Bull. 101: 159179.Google Scholar
James, F. C. (1983) Environmental component of morphological differentiation in birds. Science 221: 184186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jenkinson, M. A. and Wood, D. S. (1985) Avian anatomical specimens: a geographic analysis of needs. Auk 102: 587599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jiménez, J. A., Hughes, K. A., Alaks, G., Graham, L. and Lacy, R. C. (1994) An experimental study of inbreeding depression in natural habitat. Science 266: 271273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, N. K. and Johnson, C. B. (1985) Speciation in sapsuckers (Sphyrapicus): II. Sympatry, hybridization, and mate preference in S. ruber dagetti and S. nuchalis. Auk 102: 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, N. K. and Marten, J. A. (1988) Evolutionary genetics of flycatchers. II. Differentiation in the Empidonax difficilis complex. Auk 105: 177191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, N. K. and Zink, R. M. (1983) Speciation in sapsuckers (Sphyrapicus): I. Genetic differentiation. Auk 10: 871884.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, N. K. and Zink, R. M. (1985) Genetic evidence for relationships among the Red-eyed, Yellow-green, and Chivi vireos. Wilson Bull. 97: 421435.Google Scholar
Johnson, N. K., Zink, R. M., Barrowclough, G. F. and Marten, J. A. (1984) Suggested techniques for modern avian systematics. Wilson Bull. 96: 543560.Google Scholar
Johnston, D. W. (1955) Mass bird mortality in Georgia, October, 1954. Oriole 20: 1726.Google Scholar
Johnston, R. F. and Selander, R. K. (1971) Evolution in the House Sparrow II. Adaptive differentiation in North American populations. Evolution 25: 128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ketterson, E. D. and Nolan, V. Jr (1986) Effect of laparotomy of Tree Sparrows and Dark-eyed Juncos during winter on subsequent survival in the field. J. Field Orn. 57: 239240.Google Scholar
Klem, D. Jr (1990) Collisions between birds and windows: mortality and prevention. J. Field Orn. 61: 120128.Google Scholar
Kingsbury, P. A. (1975) Who took the birds out of British ornithology? Brit. Birds 68: 473.Google Scholar
Kiff, L. F. and Hough, D. J. (1985) Inventory of bird egg collections of North America, 1985. Norman, Oklahoma: American Ornithologists' Union and Oklahoma Biological Survey.Google Scholar
Kinsky, F. C. and Harper, P. C. (1968) Shrinkage of bill width in skins of some Pachyptila species. Ibis 110: 100102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knox, A. (1980) Post-mortem changes in wing-lengths and wing-formulae. Ringing and Migration 3: 2931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lack, D. (1954) The natural regulation of animal numbers. Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Lack, D. (1966) Population studies of birds. Oxford, U.K.: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Langston, N. E. and Rohwer, S. (1995) Unusual patterns of incomplete primary molt in Laysan and Black-footed albatrosses. Condor 97: 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanyon, S. M. (1992) Interspecific brood parasitism in blackbirds (Icterinae): a phylogen-etic perspective. Science 255: 7779.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lederer, R. J. and Crane, R. (1978) The effects of emetics on wild birds. North Amer. Bird Bander 3: 35.Google Scholar
Lee, D. S. and Clark, M. K. (1993) Notes on post-breeding American Swallow-tailed Kites, Elanoides forficatus (Falconiformes: Accipitridae), in north central Florida. Brimley ana 19: 185203.Google Scholar
Lee, D. S. and Socci, M. C. (1989) Potential effects of oil spills on seabirds and selected other oceanic vertebrates off the North Carolina coast. Occ. Pap. N. Carolina Biol. Survey 1989 1: 164.Google Scholar
Leeton, P., Christidis, L. and Westerman, M. (1993) Feathers from museum bird skins a good source of DNA for phylogenetic studies. Condor 95: 465466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liversidge, R. (1975) Collecting capers. Bokmakierie 27: 2728.Google Scholar
Magnin, G. (1991) Hunting and persecution of migratory birds in the Mediterranean region. Pp.5971 in Salathe, T., ed. Conserving migratory birds. Cambridge, U.K.: International Council for Bird Preservation (Techn. Publ. 12).Google Scholar
Major, R. E. (1989) The effect of human observers on the intensity of nest predation. Ibis 132: 608612.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marantz, C. A. and Remsen, J. V. Jr (1991) Seasonal distribution of the Slaty Elaenia (Elaenia strepera), a little-known austral migrant of South America. J. Field Orn. 62: 162172.Google Scholar
Marion, W. R. and Shamis, J. D. (1977) An annotated bibliography of bird marking techniques. J. Field Orn. 48: 4261.Google Scholar
Marsden, J. E. and May, B. (1984) Feather pulp: a non-destructive sampling technique for electrophoretic studies of birds. Auk 101: 173174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, J. T. Jr (1948) Ecological races of Song Sparrow in the San Francisco Bay region. Part II. Geographic variation. Condor 50: 233256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGeehan, A. (1993) Enlightenment, not epitaphs. Birding 25: 129.Google Scholar
McGeehan, A. (1994) Enlightenment, not epitaphs. Birdwatch 23: 20.Google Scholar
McGowan, K. J. and Caffrey, C. (1994) Does drugging crows for capture cause abnormally high mortality? J. Field Orn. 65: 453457.Google Scholar
Miller, A. H. (1959) Reproductive cycles in an equatorial sparrow. Proc. Natn. Acad. Sci. 45: 10951100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, A. H. (1962) Bimodal occurrence of breeding in an equatorial sparrow. Proc. Natn. Acad. Sci. 48: 396400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, A. H. (1963) Seasonal activity and ecology of the avifauna of an American equatorial cloud forest. Univ. California Publ. Zool. 66: 178.Google Scholar
Miller, E. H. (1985) Museum collections and the study of animal social behavior. Pp. 139162 in Millered, E. H.. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Mitchell, D. (1994) Editor's letter. Birdwatch 23: 23.Google Scholar
Mailer, A. P. (1991) Sperm competition, sperm depletion, paternal care, and relative testis size in birds. Amer. Nat. 137: 882906.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morlan, J. and Erickson, R. A. (1983) A Eurasian Skylark at Point Reyes, California, with notes on skylark identification and systematics. West. Birds 14: 113126.Google Scholar
Moser, M. L. and Lee, D. S. (1992) A fourteen-year survey of plastic ingestion by western North Atlantic seabirds. Colonial Waterbirds 15: 8394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moyser, G. (1987) Points of view. Brit. Birds 80: 582.Google Scholar
Mulliken, T. A., Broad, S. R. and Thomsen, J. B. (1992) The wild bird trade - an overview. Pp. 141 in Thomsen, J. B., Edwards, S. R. and Mulliken, T. A., eds. Perceptions, conservation and management of wild birds in trade. Cambridge, U.K.: Traffic International.Google Scholar
Mumme, R. L., Koenig, W. D., Zink, R. M. and Marten, J. A. (1985) An analysis of genetic variation and parentage in a California population of Acorn Woodpeckers. Auk 102: 305312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myers, N. (1986) Tropical deforestation and a mega-extinction spasm. Pp.394409 in Soule, M. E., ed. Conservation biology, the science of scarcity and diversity. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates.Google Scholar
Nickell, W. D. (1964) Fatal entanglements of Herring Gulls (Lams argentatus) and Common Terns (Sterna hirundo). Auk 81: 555556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Odin, N. (1994) Letter to the editor. Birdwatch 25: 30.Google Scholar
Ollason, J. C. and Dunnet, G. M. (1980) Nest failures in the Fulmar: the effect of observers. J. Field Orn. 51: 3954.Google Scholar
Olson, S. L. (1994) The endemic vireo of Fernando de Noronha (Vireo gracilirostris). Wilson Bull. 106: 117.Google Scholar
Ouellet, H. (1993) Bicknell's Thrust: taxonomic status and distribution. Wilson Bull. 105: 545572.Google Scholar
Parker, T. A. III, and Bailey, B., eds. (1991) A biological assessment of the Alto Madidi region and adjacent areas of northwest Bolivia. Washington, D.C.: Conservation International, Rapid Assessment Working Papers 1.Google Scholar
Parker, T. A. III, Bates, J. M. and Cox, G. (1992) Rediscovery of the Bolivian Recurvebill with notes on other little-known species of the Bolivian Andes. Wilson Bull. 104: 173178.Google Scholar
Parkes, K. C. (1963) The contribution of museum collections to knowledge of the living bird. Living Bird 2: 121130.Google Scholar
Payne, R. B. (1982) Species limits in the indigobirds (Ploceidae, Vidua) of West Africa: mouth mimicry, song mimicry, and description of new species. Misc. Publ. Mus. Z00L. Univ. Michigan No. 162.Google Scholar
Peterson, A. T. and Burt, D. B. (1992) A phylogenetic analysis of social evolution and habitat use in the Aphdocoma jays. Anim. Behav. 44: 859866.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, A. R. (1974) The need for education and collecting. Bird-Banding 45: 2428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, A. R. (1975) Semipalmated Sandpiper: identifications, migrations, summer and winter ranges. Amer. Birds 29: 799806.Google Scholar
Picozzi, N. (1975) Crow predation on marked nests. J. Wildl. Mgmt. 39: 151155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pierpont, N. and Fitzpatrick, J. W. (1983) Specific status and behavior of Cymbilaimus sanctaemariae, the Bamboo Antshrike, from southwestern Amazonia. Auk 100: 645652.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porneluzi, P., Bednarz, J. C., Goodrich, L. J., Zawada, N. and Hoover, J. (1993) Reproductive performance of territorial ovenbirds occupying forest fragments and a contiguous forest in Pennsylvania. Conserv. Biol. 7: 618622.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poulin, B., Lefebvre, G. and McNeil, R. (1994) Effect and efficiency of tartar emetic in determining the diet of tropical land birds. Condor 96: 98104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pyle, P. (1993) Collecting vagrants. Birding 25: 374375.Google Scholar
Raikow, R. J. (1985) Museum collections, comparative anatomy and the study of phylogeny. Pp.113122 in Miller, E. H., ed. Museum collections: their roles and future in biological research. British Columbia Prov. Mus. Occ. Pap. No. 25.Google Scholar
Ramos, M. A. (1988) Eco-evolutionary aspects of bird movements in the northern Neo-tropical region. Ada XIX Congr. Intern. Orn.: 251293.Google Scholar
Raven, P. H. and Wilson, E. O. (1992) A fifty-year plan for biodiversity studies. Science 258: 10991100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Recher, H. F., Gowing, G. and Armstrong, T. (1985) Causes and frequency of deaths among birds mist-netted for banding studies at two localities. Australian Wildl. Res. 12: 321326.Google Scholar
Remsen, J. V. Jr (1984) Geographic variation, zoogeography, and possible rapid evolution in some Cranioleuca spinetails. Wilson Bull. 96: 515523.Google Scholar
Remsen, J. V. Jr (1985) Community organization and ecology of birds of high elevation humid forest of the Bolivian Andes. Pp.733756 in Buckley, P. A., Foster, M. S., Morton, E. S.,Ridgely, R. S. and Buckley, F. G., eds. Neotropical ornithology. American Ornithologists' Union (Orn. Monogr. No. 36).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Remsen, J. V. Jr (1991) Por que colectar especimenes de aves, con recomendaciones para la otorgacion de permisos de colecta. Ecologi'a en Bolivia 18: 5268.Google Scholar
Remsen, J. V. Jr (1993) Emotionalism is the epitaph for enlightenment. Birding 25: 129132.Google Scholar
Remsen, J. V. Jr, and Parker, T. A., III (1990) Seasonal distribution of the Azure Gallin-ule (Porphynda flavirostris), with comments on vagrancy in rails and gallinules. Wilson Bull. 102: 380399.Google Scholar
Richman, A. D. and Price, T. D. (1992) Evolution of ecological differences in the Old World leaf warblers. Nature 355: 817821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Richner, H. (1989) Avian laparoscopy as a field technique for sexing birds and an assessment of its effect on wild birds. J. Field Orn. 60: 137142.Google Scholar
Ricklefs, R. E. (1980) Old specimens and new directions: the museum tradition in contemporary ornithology. Auk 97: 206207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Risebrough, R. W. (1986) Pesticides and bird populations. Current Orn. 3: 397427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robbins, C. S., Bystrak, D. and Geissler, P. H. (1986) The Breeding Bird Survey: its first fifteen years, 1965–1979. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Dept. Interior (Resource Publ. 57).Google Scholar
Robert, H. C. and Ralph, C. J. (1975) Effects of human disturbance on the breeding success of gulls. Condor 77: 495499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, S. K. (1992) Population dynamics of breeding Neotropical migrants in a fragmented landscape. Pp. 408418 in Hagan, J. M., III, and Johnston, D. W., eds. Ecology and conservation of Neotropical migrant landbirds. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Roby, D. D. (1991) A comparison of two noninvasive techniques to measure total body lipid in live birds. Auk 108: 509518.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohwer, S. (1975) The social significance of avian winter plumage variability. Evolution 29: 593610.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ross, H. A. (1983) Genetic differentiation of Starling (Sturnus vulgaris: Aves) populations in New Zealand and Great Britain. J. Zool. 201: 351362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rylander, M. K. (1967) A short history of ornithology at Tulane University. Proc. Louisiana Acad. Sci. 30: 8790.Google Scholar
Sallee, G. W. (1978) Ingestion of fishing lures by Little Blue Herons. Bull. Oklahoma Orn. Soc. 11: 29.Google Scholar
Seymour, J. (1994) No way to treat a natural treasure. New Scientist (12 March): 3235.Google Scholar
Seutin, G., Brawn, J., Ricklefs, R. E. and Bermingham, E. (1993) Genetic divergence among populations of a tropical passerine, the Streaked Saltator (Saltator albicollis). Auk 110: 117126.Google Scholar
Sharrock, J. T. R. (1986) Hunting, shooting and wildlife. Brit. Birds 79: 248249.Google Scholar
Sheldon, F. H., Slikas, B., Kinnarney, M., Gill, F. B. and Silverin, B. (1992) DNA-DNA hybridization evidence of phylogenetic relationships among major lineages of Parus. Auk 109: 173185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
da Silva, J. M. C. (1991) Sistematica e biogeografia da superespecie Nystalus maculatus (Piciformes: Bucconidae). Ararajuba 2: 7579.Google Scholar
Simberloff, D. (1988) The contribution of population and community biology to conservation science. Annu. Rev. Ecol. Systematics 19: 473511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skutch, A. F. (1985) Clutch size, nesting success, and predation on nests of Neotropical birds, revisited. Pp.575594 in Buckley, P. A., Foster, M. S.Morton, E. S., Ridgely, R. S. and Buckley, F. G., eds. Neotropical ornithology. American Ornithologists' Union (Orn.Monogr. No. 36).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, T. B., Freed, L. A., Lepson, J. K. and Carothers, J. H. (in press) Evolutionary consequences of extinctions in populations of a Hawaiian honeycreeper. Conserv. Biol.Google Scholar
Snow, D. W. (1980) A new species of cotinga from southeastern Brazil. Bull. Brit. Orn. Club 100: 213215.Google Scholar
St. Louis, V. L. and Barlow, J. C. (1988) Genetic differentiation among ancestral and introduced populations of the Eurasian Tree Sparrow (Passer montanus). Evolution 42:. 266276.Google Scholar
St. Louis, V. L. and Barlow, J. C. (1991) Morphometric analysis of introduced and ancestral populations of the Eurasian Tree Sparrow. Wilson Bull. 103: 112.Google Scholar
Stangel, P. W. (1986) Lack of effects from sampling blood from small birds. Condor 88: 244245.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevenson, H. M., Eisenmann, E., Winegarner, C. and Karlin, A. (1983) Notes on Common and Antillean nighthawks of the Florida Keys. Auk 100: 983988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stiles, F. G. (1981) The taxonomy of rough-winged swallows (Stelgidopteryx; Hirundinidae) in southern Central America. Wilson Bull. 93: 282293.Google Scholar
Stiles, F. G. (1983a) The taxonomy of Microcerculus wrens (Troglodytidae) in Central America. Wilson Bull. 95: 282293.Google Scholar
Stiles, F. G. (1983b) On sightings and specimens. Auk 100: 225226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storer, R. W. (1988) The need for more museum specimens of colonial waterbirds. Colonial Waterbirds 11: 123124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Storer, R. W. (1992) Intraspecific variation and the identification of Pliocene and Pleistocene grebes. Nat. Hist. Mus. Los Angeles Co. Sci. Series 36: 419422.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J., Robinson, S. K., Parker, T. A. III, Munn, C. A. and Pierpont, N. (1990) Structure and organization of an Amazonian forest bird community. Ecol. Monogr. 60: 213238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, C. W. and Leu, M. (1994) Determining homology of molts and plumages to address evolutionary questions: a rejoinder regarding emberizid finches. Condor 96: 769782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, D. R., Furness, R. W. and Walsh, P. W. (1992) Historical changes in mercury concentrations in the marine ecosystem of the north and north-east Atlantic Ocean as indicated by seabird feathers. J. Appl. Ecol. 29: 7984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiersch, T. R. and Mumme, R. L. (1993) An evaluation of the use of flow cytometry to identify sex in the Florida Scrub Jay. J. Field Orn. 64: 1826.Google Scholar
Vaurie, C. (1980) Taxonomy and geographical distribution of the Furnariidae (Aves, Passeriformes). Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 166: 1357.Google Scholar
Walkinshaw, L. H. (1942) Aortic rupture in Field Sparrow due to fright. Auk 62: 141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walsberg, G. F. (1988) Evaluation of a nondestructive method for determining fat stores in small birds and mammals. Physiol. Zool. 61: 153159.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walsberg, G. F. (1993) The treatment of biologists by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Condor 95: 748757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walsberg, G. F. (1994) The use of wild birds in research. Condor 96: 11191120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westmoreland, D. and Best, L. B. (1985) The effect of disturbance on Mourning Dove nest success. Auk 102: 774780.Google Scholar
Westneat, D. F. (1986) The effects of muscle biopsy on survival and condition of White-throated Sparrows. Wilson Bull. 98: 280285.Google Scholar
Westneat, D. F., Payne, R. B. and Doehlert, S. M. (1986) Effects of muscle biopsy on survival and breeding success in Indigo Buntings. Condor 88: 220227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willard, D. E., Foster, M. S., Barrowclough, G. F., Dickerman, R. W., Cannell, P. F., Coats, S. L., Cracraft, J. L. and O'Neill, J. P. (1991) The birds of Cerro de la Neblina, Territorio Federal Amazonas, Venezuela. Fieldiana (Zool.), New Ser., No. 65.Google Scholar
Winker, K. (1993) Specimen shrinkage in Tennessee Warblers and “Traill's” Flycatchers. J. Field Orn. 64: 331336.Google Scholar
Winker, K., Fall, B. A., Klicka, J. T., Parmelee, D. F. and Tordoff, H. B. (1991) The importance of avian collections and the need for continued collecting. Loon 63: 238246.Google Scholar
Winker, K., Voelker, G. A. and Klicka, J. T. (1994) A morphometric examination of sexual dimorphism in the Hylophilus, Xenops, and an Automolus from southern Veracruz, Mexico. J. Field Orn. 65: 307323.Google Scholar
Winkler, D. W. and Sheldon, F. H. (1993) Evolution of nest construction in swallows (Hirundinidae): a molecular phylogenetic perspective. Proc. Natn. Acad. Sci. 90: 57055707.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wood, D. S. and Schnell, G. D. (1986) Revised world inventory of avian skeletal specimens, 1986. Norman, Oklahoma: American Ornithologists' Union and Oklahoma Biological Survey.Google Scholar
Woolfenden, G. E. and Fitzpatrick, J. W. (1991) Florida Scrub Jay ecology and conservation. Pp.542565 in Perrins, C. M., Lebreton, J. D. and Hirons, G. J. M., eds. Bird population studies: relevance to conservation and management. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zach, R. and Falls, J. B. (1976) Bias and mortality in the use of tartar emetic to determine the diet of Ovenbirds (Aves: Parulidae). Canad. J. Zool. 54: 15991603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zink, R. M. (1983) Evolutionary and systematic significance of temporal variation in the Fox Sparrow. Syst. Zool. 32: 223238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zink, R. M. (1988) Evolution of brown towhees: allozymes, morphometrics and species limits. Condor 90: 7282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zink, R. M. (1994) The geography of mitochondrial DNA variation, population structure, hybridization, and species limits in the Fox Sparrow (Passerella iliaca). Evolution 48: 96111.Google ScholarPubMed
Zink, R. M. and Dittmann, D. L. (1991) Evolution of brown towhees: mitochrondrial DNA evidence. Condor 93: 98105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zink, R. M. and Kale, H. W. (in press) Conservation genetics of the extinct Dusky Seaside Sparrow. Biol. Conserv.Google Scholar
Zusi, R. L., Wood, D. S. and Jenkinson, M. A. (1982) Remarks on a world-wide inventory of avian anatomical specimens. Auk 99: 740757.Google Scholar