This is a post from Guest Author Randall Johnson, who has contributed a number
of guest posts and comments to this blog.
A few weeks ago, I came across a news item that got me thinking about
the extremes our current level of separation from the natural world can
sometimes carry us.
It seems a small town in Massachusetts
acquired an unofficial mascot a few months ago in the form of a wild turkey,
which the townspeople named ‘Freddy’. He strutted around town freely, visiting
local businesses, going in and out of stores, and getting hand-outs along the
way. He became something of a local celebrity, having attracting local media
attention through his ‘friendly’ behavior.
However, in early August, the local police found it necessary to
apprehend and euthanize Freddy after he was declared a public safety hazard for
having attacked motorcyclists and passersby. Afterwards, the town held a
memorial service for its beloved bird, with mourners leaving flowers and notes.
One resident even set up a Facebook page in Freddy’s honor with over 1,500
friends and counting.
What the townspeople may not have known is wild turkeys can be aggressive
when they lose their fear of people and, after several months of urban living,
Freddy had become pretty much fearless. As such, he wasn’t an ideal candidate
for relocation, as was pointed out by local wildlife officials.
Now, there was nothing unusual or out-of-the-ordinary about Freddy’s
behavior, considering he’d become habituated to humans and vehicular traffic. However,
the fact that some of the town’s citizens organized and participated in a memorial
service for him gave me pause for reflection. It struck me that the energy and
emotion that went into this act of mourning was disproportionate to the
situation.
Granted, wild turkeys are the official game bird of Massachusetts.
Granted, by 1851, they had been wiped out from the state as a result of
hunting.
However, in 1972-1973, the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife launched
a successful reintroduction program, starting with 37 turkeys. Today, the
turkey population in Massachusetts
is somewhere between 20,000-25,000!
So, they’re not threatened with imminent extinction, unlike the 16,300
or so plant and animal species that appear on the World Conservation Union’s
2007 Red List of Threatened Species.
Let’s put this into perspective even more.
Wild turkeys grow to be 4 feet tall and weigh around 20 pounds. Not exactly
lightweights! Following their reintroduction, they surprised everyone—including
wildlife officials—by being adaptable to residential, even urban, living, with
thriving populations in Boston and Cambridge. They are
opportunistic feeders, eating everything from bird seed to gutter trash, and
then depositing large amounts of ‘scat’ all over the place.
Some residents report being happy to see a bit a nature strolling
around, whereas others are wary, even afraid, of what these sometimes ornery
birds might do, especially when children are around. More than a few people
have even reported being terrorized by them, prompting local police to issue
guidelines about what to do—and not to do—should people meet a wild turkey on
the sidewalk.
It strikes me that reintroduction programs can be a double-edge sword. Yes,
Massachusetts
got its turkeys back after more than one hundred ‘turkey-less’ years. But now
many of the state’s communities have a new public health and safety issue to
deal with that the Fisheries and Wildlife biologists hadn’t counted on.
At the individual level, some people’s need for contact with nature
leads to maudlin displays of sentimentality that make for good headlines but that’s
about all.
There’s no question that we need to exercise a healthy dose of
compassion in our treatment of other species. After all, humans are now the
leading cause of extinction. But in addition to using our hearts, we also need
to use our heads.
I took a quick first read through this and was quite impressed with what you have pulled together. I'm looking forward to going back and reading through it again with a highlighter and pen to make remarks and take notes.
Great stuff!
Posted by: art paintings | July 24, 2010 at 12:40 AM