|
|
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Moving, well-informed discussion of migration in the '90s., August 31, 1999
This review by Charlotte Seidenberg was published Sunday, May 9, 1999 in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune ''So tell me, what is a blackburnian warbler worth, orange and ebony like a jungle tiger?'' Scott Weidensaul asks in ''Living on the Wind: Across the Globe with Migratory Birds." "In the end such measures are pointless," he answers. "We should probably just stand aside and watch with quiet humility as another generation of travelers flies north, compelled by a priceless bravery buried deep in their genes." Though some gloomy scientists predict the end of migrations in our lifetime, Weidensaul says "there's no future in pessimism. Here, at the last possible moment, we have awakened to what we stand to lose -- poised on the brink, but still, perhaps, with time to draw away from the edge." This immensely readable exploration of bird migration by a prolific nature writer and licensed bird bander shows us just what we stand to lose. It's science that reads like adventure with well-drawn characters in vividly described settings. It's about birds and nature, but also about people and the ways they interact with the natural world. It's a cliffhanger with the ending as yet unwritten. The author traveled from one end of the Western Hemisphere to the other pursuing the mysteries of migration: from the western Alaskan breeding grounds of millions of shorebirds with names such as tattler and dunlin and godwit to the Argentine pampas, wintering grounds of the Swainson's hawk, "a bird made of light and shadow, at home in the pale blue bowl of the prairie sky." In Vera Cruz, Mexico, he watched thousands of migratory hawks, kites, and vultures "move across the landscape by sliding from thermal to thermal, forming enormous kettles that swirl and seethe with wheeling birds." He visited the Platte River in Nebraska, where half a million sandhill cranes with six-foot wingspans rest on their way to the tundra, and experienced an avian "fallout" on the Gulf Coast, where "small explosions of birds would materialize out of the sky, whirring from on high, beyond the limit of vision and into the trees like bolts, until the woods were stuffed to overflowing with them." People in pursuit Weidensaul's human subjects are equally vivid, ranging from passionate goose hunters to birders "with thousand dollar binoculars and field guides worn in holster-like pouches riding low on their hips." He introduces a backyard birder who fed a ton and a half of food to 150 grosbeaks in his yard one winter and "citizen scientists" who collaborate on research projects, doing field work in their backyards and reporting via the Internet. Elucidating the scientific process for the layman, he makes fieldwork seem like adventure, describing ornithologists who signed onto Norwegian freighters to prove trans-Gulf migration, who rigged hawks with radio transmitters to track them to their wintering grounds, who used radar to study migration and gathered the "first hard, quantifiable evidence that a decline had indeed taken place." Other scientists studied warblers wintering in Jamaica and the same species summering in New Hampshire, and "uncovered an army of dangers that we, in our heedless manipulation of the natural world, are making worse." Scientists now recognize a host of problems for migratory birds -- from habitat loss to predation by domestic cats -- and are searching for solutions. Will those solutions come too late? Before dawn in late spring, Weidensaul travels to an eastern forest, where male wood thrushes sing "their clear notes scrolling up and down like improvisations, looping back on themselves, then ringing out in lucent peals. When the thrush stops, it feels as though the forest is holding its breath." What if the thrush stopped forever? After reading "Living on the Wind," you'll likely agree the thought is unacceptable. Living on the Wind: Across the Globe With Migratory Birds Review: A beautifully written, well-informed and moving discussion of migratory birds and the problems affecting migration in the '90s. Especially entertaining are the author's portraits of people who are passionate about birds. © Copyright 1999 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.
|