Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People
Finalist for the 2017 da Vinci Eye presented by Hopewell Publications

In the late 1970s, the bald eagle and the peregrine falcon were heading toward extinction, victims of the combined threats of DDT, habitat loss, and lax regulation. Flight Paths tells the story of how a small group of New York biologists raced against nature's clock to bring these two beloved birds back from the brink in record-setting numbers.

In a narrative that reads like a suspense tale, Darryl McGrath documents both rescue projects in never-before-published detail. At Cornell University, a team of scientists worked to crack the problem of how to breed peregrine falcons in captivity and then restore them to the wild. Meanwhile, two young, untested biologists tackled the overwhelming assignment of rebuilding the bald eagle population from the state's last nesting pair, one of whom (the female) was sterile.

McGrath interweaves this dramatic retelling with contemporary accounts of four at-risk species: the short-eared owl, the common loon, the Bicknell's thrush, and the piping plover. She worked alongside biologists as they studied these elusive subjects in the Northeast's most remote regions, and the result is a story that combines vivid narrative with accessible science and is as much a tribute to these experts as it is a call to action for threatened birds.

Readers are taken to a snow-covered meadow as an owl hunts her prey, a loon family's secluded pond, an eagle nest above the Hudson River, and a mountaintop at dusk in search of the Bicknell's thrush, one of the planet's rarest birds. Combining a little-known chapter of New York's natural history with a deeply personal account of a lifelong devotion to birds, Flight Paths is not only a story of our rapidly changing environment and a tribute to some of New York's most heroic biologists, but also a captivating read for anyone who has ever thrilled to the sight of a rare bird.
1123058515
Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People
Finalist for the 2017 da Vinci Eye presented by Hopewell Publications

In the late 1970s, the bald eagle and the peregrine falcon were heading toward extinction, victims of the combined threats of DDT, habitat loss, and lax regulation. Flight Paths tells the story of how a small group of New York biologists raced against nature's clock to bring these two beloved birds back from the brink in record-setting numbers.

In a narrative that reads like a suspense tale, Darryl McGrath documents both rescue projects in never-before-published detail. At Cornell University, a team of scientists worked to crack the problem of how to breed peregrine falcons in captivity and then restore them to the wild. Meanwhile, two young, untested biologists tackled the overwhelming assignment of rebuilding the bald eagle population from the state's last nesting pair, one of whom (the female) was sterile.

McGrath interweaves this dramatic retelling with contemporary accounts of four at-risk species: the short-eared owl, the common loon, the Bicknell's thrush, and the piping plover. She worked alongside biologists as they studied these elusive subjects in the Northeast's most remote regions, and the result is a story that combines vivid narrative with accessible science and is as much a tribute to these experts as it is a call to action for threatened birds.

Readers are taken to a snow-covered meadow as an owl hunts her prey, a loon family's secluded pond, an eagle nest above the Hudson River, and a mountaintop at dusk in search of the Bicknell's thrush, one of the planet's rarest birds. Combining a little-known chapter of New York's natural history with a deeply personal account of a lifelong devotion to birds, Flight Paths is not only a story of our rapidly changing environment and a tribute to some of New York's most heroic biologists, but also a captivating read for anyone who has ever thrilled to the sight of a rare bird.
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Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People

Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People

by Darryl McGrath
Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People

Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People

by Darryl McGrath

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Overview

Finalist for the 2017 da Vinci Eye presented by Hopewell Publications

In the late 1970s, the bald eagle and the peregrine falcon were heading toward extinction, victims of the combined threats of DDT, habitat loss, and lax regulation. Flight Paths tells the story of how a small group of New York biologists raced against nature's clock to bring these two beloved birds back from the brink in record-setting numbers.

In a narrative that reads like a suspense tale, Darryl McGrath documents both rescue projects in never-before-published detail. At Cornell University, a team of scientists worked to crack the problem of how to breed peregrine falcons in captivity and then restore them to the wild. Meanwhile, two young, untested biologists tackled the overwhelming assignment of rebuilding the bald eagle population from the state's last nesting pair, one of whom (the female) was sterile.

McGrath interweaves this dramatic retelling with contemporary accounts of four at-risk species: the short-eared owl, the common loon, the Bicknell's thrush, and the piping plover. She worked alongside biologists as they studied these elusive subjects in the Northeast's most remote regions, and the result is a story that combines vivid narrative with accessible science and is as much a tribute to these experts as it is a call to action for threatened birds.

Readers are taken to a snow-covered meadow as an owl hunts her prey, a loon family's secluded pond, an eagle nest above the Hudson River, and a mountaintop at dusk in search of the Bicknell's thrush, one of the planet's rarest birds. Combining a little-known chapter of New York's natural history with a deeply personal account of a lifelong devotion to birds, Flight Paths is not only a story of our rapidly changing environment and a tribute to some of New York's most heroic biologists, but also a captivating read for anyone who has ever thrilled to the sight of a rare bird.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438459271
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 01/11/2016
Series: Excelsior Editions
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 378
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Darryl McGrath is a journalist living in Albany, New York. She has written about upstate New York's environment and rural regions for over twenty years and has won numerous awards for her reporting from the New York Press Association, the New York Associated Press Association, and the Society of Professional Journalists.

Table of Contents

Author’s Note

Part I. WHY WE SHOULD CARE ABOUT BIRDS

Prologue
Hemlock Lake, January 1976

1. Nature’s Winged Warning System

2. All Those Trees Out There: Of Humans, Habitat, and Birds

Part II. THE RESCUERS

3. The Bird That Owned the Sky: Tom Cade and the Peregrine Falcon

4. The Great Peregrine Falcon Restoration Project

5. The Last Pair of Eagles in New York: Hemlock Lake, 1976

6. So Wild and Free: Bringing Bald Eagles Back to New York

Part III. WHERE WILL THEY BE IN ONE HUNDRED YEARS?

7. Toxic Summer: Loons, Lead, and Our Poisoned Lakes

8. Our Winter Visitors: Short–eared Owls and New York’s Endangered Grasslands

9. The Most Beautiful Sound on the Mountain: The World of the Bicknell’s Thrush

Part IV: A BRIEF AND DANGEROUS LIFE

10. Windows, Windmills, and Lights: The Many Ways We Kill Birds

11. A Billion Dead Birds a Year? The Controversy about Cats

Part V: THE WORLD WE’VE MADE

12. Comeback: The Astonishing Return of the Peregrine Falcon

13. Up in the New York Skies: Bald Eagles Everywhere

Epilogue
Everything is Connected

The Rescuers: Where are They Now?

Common and Scientific Names of Bird Species, Cited in Order of Appearance in Text

Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
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