Log In

Reset Password
BERMUDA | RSS PODCAST

Celebrating 60 years

First Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next Last
Wide-ranging speech: Dr Nigel Collar

The Bermuda Audubon Society celebrated its 60th anniversary with a dinner and special lecture by Dr Nigel Collar of BirdLife International.

He gave the broad-ranging talk that touched on the impact of birds in everything from Renaissance art to the modern environmental movement.

Dr Collar, the principal author on HBW/BirdLife, an illustrated checklist of the birds of the world, spoke to about 70 people who attended the celebratory dinner at Beau Rivage at the Newstead Belmont Hills Golf Resort & Spa, including Governor and Audubon Society patron George Fergusson.

During the lecture Dr Collar explained that the word ‘auspicious’ came from the word ‘auspices’, which in ancient Roman times was divination using birds either through bird song, or flight.

He showed that birds infiltrate many aspects of life, from money “birds are stamped on it”, to the Kookaburra, whose name is used in brands “for everything from cricket equipment to underwear”.

Dr Collar illustrated his lecture with dozens of slides and focused on ornithology as represented in the arts and science.

He pointed to Leonardo DaVinci included at least 750 pictures of birds in his works, as well as Roelant Savery who is famous for being a prolific illustrator of the now extinct dodo in the 1620s.

Composers such as Gustav Mahler described birds musically, Dr Collar told the audience. The first movement of Mahler’s Symphony No 1 in D major imitates the sound of a cuckoo, while Elvis Presley also referenced the class of fauna in his song: ‘I want to be free — like the bird in the tree’.

Feathers are the sign of tribes in some cultures, he noted, while pointing out that everything that Shakespeare wrote was inscribed with a feather pen.

In science, he said: “The pigeon was the fundamental driver of (Charles) Darwin’s understanding of natural evolution.”

Media owes an early method of news delivery to birds. The news agency Reuters “started by communicating everything by (carrier) pigeon,” he said.

For the natural world, the book and film Silent Spring had far-reaching consequences. The impetus for Silent Spring was the death of birds resulting from the aerial spraying of DDT. Chronicled by Rachel Carson in the early 1960s, it made her the mother of the modern environmental movement.

Dr Collar also described the abuse of birds, he said: “Bird flu — it had all to do with the appalling conditions we keep our domestic fowl,” and “a cloak for a Hawaiian King” drove a highly-prized bird species extinct. The Mamo’s orange feathers were used to create capes and hats used by royalty, and the famous yellow cloak of Kamehameha I is estimated to have taken the reigns of eight monarchs and the golden feathers of 80,000 birds to complete.

The society’s president Andrew Dobson explained that Dr Collar had worked in international conservation for 39 years, most of them spent with BirdLife International assessing the status and needs of bird species threatened with extinction.

He helped to develop the modern IUCN Red List criteria, which is intended to be an easily and widely understood system for classifying species at high risk of global extinction, and also co-authored several works including Threatened birds of Africa and related islands in 1985, Threatened birds of the Americas in 1992 and Threatened birds of Asia in 2001.

In the past decade, along with a team of doctorial students, he has focused on threatened birds, building scientific and conservation capacity in developing countries including Cambodia, Philippines, Ghana, Botswana, Ethiopia.

Dr Collar is also chairman of the IUCN Bustard Specialist Group, and an honorary professor of biology at the University of East Anglia.

Dr. David Wingate. past president of the Bermuda Audubon Society
Island bird: A Bermuda petrel or cahow in flight off the Castle islands, southeast of Bermuda
(Photo by Mark Tatem)Farewell: The cruise ship Veendam makes its way down the North Shore under clear skies yesterday afternoon after departing from Hamilton. 30.4.10
Jeremy Madeiros
Majestic: A white tailed tropicbird, or long tail, swoops over the waters of Town Cut in St George
Andrew Dobson, current president of Bermuda Audubon Society
<p>A short history</p>

Here is a short history of the Bermuda Audubon Society from its creation in 1954 to the present day.

1954: Bermuda’s first environmental charity was started by a small group of local naturalists and named in imitation of the American Audubon Society. Two of the driving concerns were the threatened loss of the native bluebird, due to the widespread death of Bermuda cedars due to a scale epidemic, and the Government policy of filling in marshes by using them as garbage dumps.

1955-1984: American Audubon Wildlife Screen Tours visited Bermuda annually. Hosted by the Society these educational films were shown in schools and to the general public.

1960: The Bermuda Audubon Society Act was passed, incorporating the Society with the power to hold land in trust for conservation.

1963: The Society purchased its first nature reserve — Seymour’s Pond — through a public fundraising appeal.

1966: Eight-acres of Paget Marsh were purchased with a second fundraising appeal.

1967: The Society was gifted the Firefly Nature Reserve in Devonshire Marsh by Kitty Zuill.

1971-73: Somerset Long Bay West nature reserve was purchased and the pond restored.

1972: Nonsuch Natural History Camp was initiated. A residential camp on Nonsuch Island for high school students, the camp continues to this day in conjunction with Bermuda Zoological Society.

1980-1986: Stokes Point Nature Reserve was purchased and its mangrove pond restored.

1985: Lambda Island was bequeathed by Gladys Collison.

1988: The northern part of Seymour’s Road up to Middle Road was gifted by the Masters Estate.

1990: Sears Cave, a large limestone sink hole in Smith’s, was donated by the Trott family.

1992: The Watlington Reserve, in Devonshire Marsh, consisting largely of wet pasture, was acquired by bequest.

1993: The Winifred Gibbons Reserve in Devonshire Marsh was donated by the Gibbons family.

1998: The Bermuda Bluebird and Longtail Society became part of the Audubon Society.

2000: A boardwalk and interpretive nature trail were created at Paget Marsh in conjunction with the Bermuda National Trust.

2002: The Alfred Blackburn Smith Nature Reserve west of Coral Beach was donated by Elfrida Chappell.

2003: The Longtail “igloo” (an artificial nest burrow) was developed.

2004: Buy Back Bermuda, a joint venture with Bermuda National Trust to save threatened open space, was set up and purchased Somerset Long Bay East nature reserve through public fundraising. The Audubon-sponsored film Bermuda’s Treasure Island was released, featuring Nonsuch Island and the cahow. Pearl Island was donated by the Butterfield family. Jeremy Madeiros was featured in the film.

2008: Buy Back Bermuda ‘2’ was launched to acquire the Vesey Reserve in Southampton and Eve’s Pond near Shelly Bay.

2013: The Vesey Reserve opened to the public.

2014: The Society celebrates its 60th anniversary. Commemorative postage stamps are issued.

See The Bermuda Audubon Society newsletter, Summer issue at www.audubon.bm