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passenger pigeon
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passenger pigeon

Extinct North American bird, genus Ectopistes migratoria, whose sudden and complete disappearance is one of the most remarkable in zoological history. It was probably the most gregarious bird in existence, and migrating flocks filled the sky for days. The birds were slaughtered for food, and in one year 15,000,000 dead birds were dispatched from Michigan and Pennsylvania. In 1888 it failed to take up its usual breeding quarters, and then disappeared without trace, the last known specimen dying at Cincinnati Zoological Gardens 1914. Its main features were its long wings and longer narrow tail.



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Not long ago, there was enough continuous forest for multitudes of passenger pigeons to migrate from the far reaches of Quebec to the tip of Florida, but as the forests disappeared, the passenger pigeons did, too.
The heavy crops of nuts in the native forests offered enough food for not only human populations, but also for animals such as bears, deer, squirrels, turkeys, and the now extinct passenger pigeons.
Those of you who read James Fennimore Cooper's The Deerslayer might remember a scene in which the pioneers blast away indiscriminately at clouds of passenger pigeons, while the Deerslayer picks out one bird, shoots it, retrieves his kill for his dinner, and Deerslayer expresses disgust at the wanton slaughter committed by the pioneers.
 
 
 
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