A male Heath Hen like Booming Been in mating display. |
The
old bachelor was out doing his
duty. If it was a typical March day on Martha’s Vineyard, the island just south of Cape Cod that even then was beloved of summer people and the year-round home
of a few hearty souls, the wind was brisk and chilly off of the Atlantic, the skies gray, but the winter snows
mostly melted, lingering in shaded spots here and there. Booming
Ben, as he fruitlessly did every year, strutted his stuff proudly, fanning
his tail, his pinnae—horns—proudly
pointed and erect behind his head, and, as his name implied, booming from the
inflated pouches on his throat. Alas, no
mate heard his call. None ever did.
A
sharp eyed bird watcher noted Ben’s
presence on the lekking—breeding—grounds on the special reserve
that had been set aside to preserve his kind. After that, Ben vanished, probably dead
within hours of his last performance.
And with him came the end of Heath
Hens. After March 11, 1932 they were
extinct.
The
Heath Hen, a member of the ground
dwelling grouse family, was once not only common, but plentiful. They ranged in the scrubby heathland barrens of coastal America from southern New Hampshire to northern Virginia and likely as far south as Florida in pre-Columbian times. They
flourished in a limited, but common coastal habitat with few natural predators. Native American tribes hunted them but did not damage the populations, except perhaps in
the Deep South from which the birds had vanished or retreated long ago. But that could also be due to climate or
other change.
Early
European settlers found the birds to
be a welcome—and easily harvested—food source.
Many scholars believe that
Heath Hen was the fowl on the table
at the inter-communal harvest feast
at Plymouth later mythologized as
the First Thanksgiving. In early Colonial
times they were so ubiquitous that they were regularly observed on Boston Common when it was a communal
grazing ground for sheep and cattle. In
such abundance, Heath Hens became a protein
staple, particularly for the class of laborers,
apprentices, household and other indentured
servants, and slaves.
Thomas L. Winthrop, a politician
and member of a distinguished Massachusetts
family, studied the Heath Hen and its history and reported in a paper delivered
to the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences in the early 19th Century
reported that some Colonial servants were so sick of a diet of Heath Hen that
they bargained with their employers not to be fed the bird more than two or
three times a week.
An artist's rendition of a mating pair. |
Consumption
on that level obviously began to take a drastic toll on Heath Hen
populations. So did other factors and
stresses, especially the introduction of a significant new predator—feral cats, the widespread destruction
of their habitat, and introduction of diseases from domestic fowl. Mainland
populations fell dramatically all through the 19th Century.
Pressure
on the population was severe enough even at the end of the 18th Century for the New
York State Legislature to pass a bill for “the preservation of heath-hen
and other game.” It was the first
legislation in the fledgling nation designed to preserve a threatened
species. Unfortunately its provisions
limiting hunting were virtually unenforceable and the population continued it
precipitous decline.
Other
efforts and proposal dotted the coming century.
But preservation efforts were complicated by confusion of just what the
Heath Hen was.
A male Prairie Chicken--the same species? |
In
1806 Lewis and Clark brought back
from their great Western expedition,
the first samples of the Prairie Chicken
seen on the East Coast. Although
larger and with somewhat different markings and colorings, scientist quickly recognized
it as a close relative of the Heath Hen—or perhaps they were variations on the
same species, or the Heath Hen and
another bird, the Lesser Prairie
Chicken found southward from the plains
of Kansas through Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, are sub-species
of the Prairie Chicken. Although
today generally classified as a sub-species, Tympanuchus cupido cupido the debate rages on among ornithologists.
Whether
a species or a sup-species, the mystery is how two populations so widely separated—the
Prairie Chicken thrived on the High Plaines roughly west of the Mississippi and east of the Rocky Mountains from the Dakotas to Texas—could have a common origin. No fossil evidence has ever been found of a
common ancestor or overlapping territory at any point.
This
was important because after it became apparent that the Heath Hen was all but
doomed, efforts were made as early as 1820 and continuing through the century
to introduce the Prairie Chicken to occupy the same ecological mix and perhaps
to strengthen and boost Heath Hen population by the introduction of vigorous
new genes.
But
the Prairie Chickens not only failed to thrive, they generally quickly died out
of areas where they were introduced. The
diets available on the arid High Plains and in the soggy, humid costal heath
wastes were evidently too different. The
Prairie Chickens also were susceptible to the same stresses from feral cats,
domestic fowl diseases, and human preditation as the Heath Hen.
Scientists,
however, are unsure if there was any interbreeding between the introduced birds
and the natives. Some think it was
unlikely due to differences in courtship rituals so important to both species
and to the relatively limited time they were exposed to one another. Others believe that interbreeding was
inevitable and that long before the Heath Hen disappeared on the mainland it was genetically no longer
distinct.
At
any rate sometime between 1840 and 1870 the Heath Hen went extinct on the
mainland. That left only the isolated
population on Martha’s Vineyard. And
between mid-century and 1900 numbers there dwindled from about 300 to 15-200 in
1890 and only 70 at the dawn of the 20th Century. That meant that the population was deeply interbred and probably already doomed.
But
valiant efforts by conservationists were
made to save the bird. A complete hunting ban was instituted and enforcement
against poachers was drastically
increased. In 1909 the Heath Hen Reserve was established
protecting much of its remaining territory and lekking grounds. At first efforts seemed to pay off. The population seemed to recover to almost
2000 birds by 1916.
Then
that year disaster struck in the form of a raging brush fire that consumed much
of the park in the middle of the breading season. A succession of unusually harsh winters
followed. The population again took a
nose dive.
Ironically,
the preservation efforts themselves contributed to the fire that precipitated
the population collapse. The ecology of
the saltwater heaths was not well understood.
It depended on regular natural lightning
ignited to rapidly scorch the ground and burn off encroaching woody plants
and vines. The fire helped the seeds
dropped the previous season from sedge grasses and other plants open up and
provide food and nesting for the birds.
Their cousins the Prairie Chickens out on the High Plains similarly
depended on regular natural fires.
But
conservation practice of the day was to prevent or immediately extinguish all
fires. Fire breaks were mandated in the
development of the reserve and local fire companies extended their service to
the park. As a result undergrowth began choking
the lekking grounds which provided cover for their worst predators—cats and was
fuel for a really big fire which could not be easily controlled.
The
population rallied one last time rising back to 600 in 1920 than began the
steady march to extinction. 1927, only about a dozen were left an only two
were females. The next year only a
solitary male—Ben—returned to the lekking grounds. He returned for five more lonely years before
vanishing.
Monument to Boombing Ben and the Heath Hen. |
There
have been serious proposals to restore what is now the Manuel F. Correllus State Forest to its
original condition, recreating the lost habitat of the Heath Hen. Some then want to attempt to re-introduce
Prairie Chickens an umbrella species occupying the niche of the Heath Hen as a monitor of habitat
quality. That remains highly
controversial given the lack of success in introducing Prairie Chickens more
than 100 years ago on the mainland and because Prairie Chickens themselves are
under stress and threatened throughout much of their range.
Sometimes with the best of intentions you just
cannot squeeze the toothpaste back into the tube.
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