Politics and birds


Dateline Nov. 5:


Obama Wins Election. Naturally, the question on everyone’s mind is, "What does this mean for the birds?" (All right, maybe you weren’t thinking of that, but it’s the reason I’m the nature columnist, and you’re not.)

 

Birds and presidents have a long and venerable association, mostly in a good way. Rumors that a


catbirdfamily was displaced when Washington chopped down the cherry tree have never been verified.

 

Thomas Jefferson gave Lewis and Clark their start in the exploring biz, and we still think of them every time we see Lewis’s

woodpeckerand Clark’s nutcracker or grebe. Like that dynamic duo, however, you have to go out West to see those species.

 

Surprisingly, Lewis and Clark did not return the favor and name a bird for the president. Would it have killed them to do so? Anyway,

Lincoln’s sparrowis not named for our 16th president, although Bonaparte’s gull is named for the nephew of the famed emperor, but that’s another story. John James Audubon once visited Andrew Jackson at the White House, but he was at least a century-and-a-half too early to win Kennedy Center Honors.

 

Perhaps the most famous presidential name connected to birds is that of Theodore Roosevelt. T.R. was a big-game hunter, of course, but he also founded the national wildlife refuge system, which helped to shepherd in the dawn of the modern conservation movement.

His cousin FDR had other things on his mind, but it’s interesting to note that Roger Tory Peterson’s landmark fieldguide, which popularized birdwatching and made it accessible to millions, was published in 1934, during FDR’s presidency and amid the Great Depression. (If you’re looking for something to do when the next Depression hits, few things can beat birding!)

Richard Nixon might not have personally taken an interest in birds, but to his great credit he signed some of the most important environmental laws, including the Endangered Species Act. On the other hand, Jimmy Carter has the distinction of being the first serious Birder-in-Chief. He was awarded an Audubon Medal in 1994.

Outgoing veep Dick Cheney was hunting

quail (not Quayle) when he famously misfired.

 

Which brings us to the president-elect, Barack Obama. He will enter the White House with no particular bird-related portfolio, but there may be one or two glimmers of hope. For one thing, he cut his political teeth in Chicago, the city that signed the first U.S. "Bird Treaty," an idea that is rapidly gaining currency. Signatories pledge to do what they can to help protect their birds and habitats.

And Obama’s Hawaiian heritage could be a good omen. Islands have always had a disproportionate share of endangered species, because the introduction of non-native predators by humans overwhelms the defenseless native birds. Hawaii is no exception. Perhaps Obama will take office with an ingrained sensitivity to the plight of America’s feathered citizens.

Here’s hoping for a bird-friendly administration. When you walk down those hallowed halls on Jan. 20, Mr. President, don’t forget to pause a moment in front of the portrait of John James Audubon.

 

Fred Baumgarten is a naturalist and writer.

 

He can be reached at fredb58@sbcglobal.net. His blog is at thatbirdblog.blogspot.com. 

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