Here Nessie!Nessie the
woodpecker
By Jim Beers
Jim Beers is a retired Refuge Manager,
Special Agent, & Wildlife Biologist U.S. Fish &
Wildlife Service.
May 15, 2006
It
has been three years since the famous
kayaker "spotted" an elusive and, heretofore,
extinct Ivory-billed Woodpecker in a flooded
Arkansas woodland. No evidence of the existence
of this extinct bird has been presented since
that time, despite the combined efforts of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Cornell
University, The Nature Conservancy, and a bevy
of birdwatchers and volunteers.
For nearly two years, the reported sighting was
kept secret from the general public, while the
federal agency (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service)
obtained millions of dollars from Congress that
it then spent to secretly "recover" the bird,
while sharing the funds with Cornell and The
Nature Conservancy. The past year has seen a
continual stream of publicity articles, calling
for more funding, more land closure and land
purchase, and land easements. Indeed, during
both the "secret" two-years and the "public"
year, The nature Conservancy has purchased
land-control easements from landowners, some of
whom knew about the sighting, and others who did
not know about the sighting. The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service has closed some federal land,
and restricted use and access on other federal
land. Environmentalists are calling for 5.5
million acres of Southern bottomland woodlands
to be purchased, or otherwise controlled, by
federal bureaucracies. But still, after three
years there is no proof of the existence
of a single ivory-billed woodpecker.
Congress has appropriated millions of dollars. A
federal agency has closed and restricted access
and use on, a large National Wildlife Refuge
that was not made a refuge, to be closed, but to
be used. Cornell University and The Nature
Conservancy have shared in the millions of
appropriated money, and the Wildlife Federation
has been skirting the edges of this little
group, to try and get some "scraps" for
themselves, as the acquisition and control of
5.5 million acres looms on the horizon, and the
ruination caused by the spotted owl out West, is
to be but a pale prelude of the havoc all these
players plan to wreak in the South, with our
money and a bad law. All based on a bird that no
one can find, no one can prove exists (despite
battalions of "volunteers" and technology that
rivals that found in Iraq and Afghanistan). All
for a bird that is claimed to be shown in a
"grainy" video, that most likely is the common
and widespread pileated woodpecker, a long way
away from the photographer.
"Grainy" photo, controversial interpretation,
extinct animal discovery, believers and
skeptics; where have we heard this before? The
Loch Ness Monster in Scotland, Sasquatch in the
Northwest, and the Yeti in Nepal – all have the
same scenario. There have been scams associated
with nearly all of these "sightings" – all three
of these classical myths. I leave it to you as
to your notions about all these critters, but
let us focus on what makes this Ivory-billed
Woodpecker affair a scandal of major
proportions.
The Ivory-billed Woodpecker is a scandal, not
because there is controversy about its existence
(I have never believed that any survived for 60
years, undetected, in Southern forests). The
Ivory-billed Woodpecker is a scandal of major
proportions because:
-
Congress appropriated millions
of our tax dollars in secrecy, that was
unlawful and unethical.
-
A
federal agency secretly schemed with groups
that it selected for two years, while denying
the public information (hunters, loggers, and
others that might have unintentionally harmed
a bird).
-
A selected and favored private
university, a favored private land-buying
organization, and a few others, used and
shared in the "insider" information, and took
easements on and (purchased?) private property
with public fund support.
-
Public access and forest use
have been restricted, and closed on public
lands.
-
The public and Congress are
being led to believe that more land must be
eased and purchased by the federal government
and their surrogate, The Nature Conservancy,
to insure recovery of a bird that none can
prove exist!
-
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, with public funds, grinds out news
releases and articles about the bird, as if it
exists, to justify more money and more
authority to "recover" a non-existent (per the
proof) bird.
-
No audit of the actions of the
private land buyers, easement purchases, or
government spending is, or will be, available,
and records of the whole sordid affair are not
granted, even under the Freedom of Information
Act.
How
stupid would it have been if Scotland had closed
boating and fishing on Loch Ness, to "recover"
Nessie? How dumb would it seem if Nepal had closed
all access to their portion of the Himalayas, to
mountain climbers and grazers, and travel between
villages, to "recover" the Yeti? How absurd would
it be to close down all access into and travel
through, and use of Northwestern woodlands for
Sasquatch? (This last one has probably got some
Cornell professor, a Nature Conservancy
"biologist," and a Forest Service "Native Species"
Coordinator thinking bad thoughts!)
Not only would these things have been thought
improper and dumb, in these other countries, but
how long would the Scots, the Nepalese, or the
Washington State folks – Seattleites would
probably love it – tolerate a government that
would do those things? How would they react to
being kept in the dark for two years? What would
be their reaction to three years' worth of looking
high and low, and no bird? What do
you think would happen to the people who would
spend public funds to restrict public lands, and
make plans to buy up private lands, secretly, for
a bird no one can find or substantiate the
existence of? Here in the USA, we meekly accept
this treatment by government as our lot in life.
We are turning into the nation of sheep, that the
Founding Fathers cautioned against.
The thing here isn't that we should argue about
the bird, we should argue about government and
elites run amok, and politicians throwing our
money at them. Let Cornell and Audubon and every
Tom, Dick, and Harry birdwatcher sleep in the
woods for the next decade (that would keep them
out of the rest of our hair), and whistle and hoot
to their hearts content, at their own
expense. If a bird or birds are found,
then let the wheels of government begin their
"exceedingly fine" grinding. Until such time,
those bureaucrats have plenty to keep them busy,
and Congress should keep a cork in the money
bucket.
The fact that this even has to be said, says much
more about the state of the nation than it does
about birds, or Arkansas woodlands.
Jim Beers is a retired Refuge Manager, Special
Agent, & Wildlife Biologist U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service.
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