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The Ivory-Bill Search Team |
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| Name | Organization |
|---|---|
| Sara Barker | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Timothy R. Barksdale | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Russ Charif | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| John Fitzpatrick | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Tom Foti | Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission |
| Tim Gallagher | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Bobby Harrison | Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama |
| Bill Holimon | Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission |
| Martjan Lammertink | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| David Luneau | University of Arkansas at Little Rock |
| J.V. Remsen | Louisiana State University |
| Ron Rohrbaugh | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Ken Rosenberg | Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
| Bill Shepherd | n/a |
| Scott Simon | The Nature Conservancy |
| John Simpson | The Nature Conservancy |
| Gene Sparling | n/a |
| Elliott Swarthout | Cache River National Wildlife Refuge |
| Peter Wrege | White River National Wildlife Refuge |
| Douglas Zollner | The Nature Conservancy |
“I believe the ivory-billed woodpecker is a symbol of hope for many people, both young and old alike. Our passion for this magical creature drives the search effort, land preservation, and the development of key partnerships towards the ultimate goal of habitat conservation.”
Sara Barker
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Sara Barker
B.A., biology, Colby College
School for Field Studies program, Kenya
Sara is the project coordinator for the ivory-billed woodpecker search and is a member of the search team. A research biologist in Conservation Science at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology since 1997, she coordinates monitoring and research protocols for threatened and declining species. Before joining the ornithology lab staff, she worked on recovery efforts for endangered birds on Hawaiian volcanoes and conducted studies of rails on a tidal river in Maryland. In the spring of 2004, she was involved with the initial search effort for the ivory-bill throughout the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge.
“The rediscovery of the ivory-bill can be the start of the recognition of the importance of wooded bottomland habitat being more than just a source for pulp and boards. These habitats are glorious, diverse and prestigious — not dark, dank and fearful.”
Timothy R. Barksdale
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Birdman Productions, LLC
Timothy R. Barksdale
B.S., wildlife ecology and conservation, Northwest Missouri State University
Timothy provided video documentation of the search for the ivory-bill. A Cornell Lab of Ornithology research associate, he is president and principal cameraman of Birdman Productions, LLC. He has filmed more than 1,100 species, including 660 of North America’s resident birds, and served as principal cameraman for Cornell Lab of Ornithology expeditions in Alaska, Florida, Hawaii, Montana and Cuba. His images have appeared on ABC, CBS, CNN, Animal Planet and elsewhere. Before becoming a cameraman, Barksdale was a research associate biologist for the Missouri Department of Conservation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
“For a generation it looked like we had forever lost one of the most compelling symbols of North American wilderness. Amazingly, we may now have a second chance to save the ivory-bill. The possibility that our children and grandchildren may one day be able to see living ivory-billed woodpeckers in the wild should inspire us to protect the forest habitats on which these magnificent birds depend.”
Russ Charif
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Russ Charif
A.B., biology, Harvard University
M.S., neurobiology and behavior, Cornell University
Russ, the coordinator for the acoustic search effort, is a research biologist in the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Bioacoustics Research Program (BRP). He has worked on studies of acoustic communication and acoustically based population monitoring in several species of birds, as well as elephants and whales. He has also been involved in the design, testing, and documentation of specialized software developed at BRP for analysis of animal sounds.
Tom Foti
M.S., botany, University of Arkansas
Tom, the chief of research for the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission, has been an active birdwatcher since 1966 and his graduate studies include ornithology. Foti has been involved in planning for habitat conservation for the area surrounding that where the ivory-bill searches in Arkansas have taken place. He has 50 years of on-the-ground experience in the White River National Wildlife Refuge and some 35 years of on-the-ground experience in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. Foti, a native Arkansan, resides in Little Rock, Arkansas.
“Since the first sighting, this has consumed us. We have dedicated our time and our dreams to protecting and conserving this area. These woods are my church. There is no bird like this in the world.”
John W. Fitzpatrick
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
John W. Fitzpatrick
B.A., Harvard University
Ph.D., Princeton University
John is the co-leader of the ivory-bill search effort in Arkansas and has been the director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology since 1995. Previously, he was executive director of Florida’s Archbold Biological Station and curator of birds at Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History. He has led scientific expeditions to remote areas of South America and published extensively on tropical birds, including seven new bird species he discovered. Fitzpatrick is the author of Neotropical Birds: Ecology and Conservation, and he has been engaged in applying science to real-world conservation issues throughout his career.
“Just to think that this bird has made it into the 21st century gives me chills. It’s like a funeral shroud has been pulled back, giving us a brief glimpse of a living bird, rising Lazarus — like from the grave. This is a bird with natural appeal — one that will capture and fire up the imagination of people throughout America and the world.”
Tim Gallagher
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Tim Gallagher
B.A., magazine journalism, California State University
M.A., English, California State University
Tim was one of the first three searchers to see and identify an ivory-bill in Arkansas in 2004, and he has returned more than a half dozen times to continue the search for the ivory-billed woodpecker. For 15 years he has served as the editor-in-chief of Living Bird, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s award-winning quarterly magazine. A professional wildlife photographer, Gallagher traveled through many of the ivory-bill’s former haunts, searching for evidence of the species’ continued existence and interviewing people who have had credible sightings. He is the author of the forthcoming book The Grail Bird: The Search for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker (Houghton Mifflin, July 2005).
“I have always believed that the ivory-billed woodpecker still lived, and finding one has been a dominate force in my life for more than three decades. Finding an ivory-bill was a 33-year dream come true for me.”
Bobby Harrison
Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama
Bobby Harrison
B.A., fine arts, emphasis in photography, Andrews University
M.S., media technology, Alabama A&M University,
Bobby is an associate professor of art and photography at Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama, and is one of the first three people involved in the search to see and identify an ivory-bill in Arkansas. He has been an avid bird watcher and student of the ivory-billed woodpecker since 1973. Harrison, who is also an award-winning wildlife photographer, began searching for ivory-bills in 1995 in Florida, and he has since searched in Georgia and Louisiana. Since 1985, Harrison has published articles on birds and bird photography in most North American birding magazines and calendars, including Audubon, Living Bird, Birder’s World, Wild Bird, Nature’s Best, Bird Watchers Digest, Outdoor Photographer and others. Harrison, a native of Decatur, Alabama, resides in Huntsville, Alabama.
Bill Holimon
B.S., accounting, Univeristy of Arkansas at Little Rock
B.S., biology, Univeristy of Arkansas at Little Rock
M.S., biology, New Mexico State University
Bill is the staff ornithologist and grants coordinator for the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission. He also is president of the Audubon Society of Central Arkansas. Previously, Bill worked for The Nature Conservancy on conservation of golden-cheeked warblers and black-capped vireos in Texas. Holimon participated in several of the searches for the ivory-billed woodpecker in Arkansas, and he is writing grants for land acquisition and increased protection of the ivory-bill habitat. In addition, he has conducted extensive work on various taxa of red crossbills throughout North America.
“The 2004-2005 search for the ivory-billed woodpecker in the Big Woods of Arkansas is an undertaking of epic proportions in terms of the number of people employed, the time spent in the field, the available technology and the dedication of the institutions and agencies involved. This search is a prime example of how to follow up on evidence suggesting the presence of ivory-billed woodpeckers.”
Martjan Lammertink
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Martjan Lammertink
M.S., University of Amsterdam
Ph.D., University of Amsterdam
Martjan is a search team leader and is considered one of the world’s experts on large woodpeckers. A researcher at Cornell’s Lab of Ornithology since 2004, Lammertinck began to study black woodpeckers as a hobby during high school. In 1991 and 1993 he searched for ivory-billed woodpeckers in eastern Cuba. Other research includes surveys in Mexico’s Sierra Madre Occidental for the status of old-growth forests and threatened birds, including the imperial woodpecker. While earning his doctorate, he studied community ecology and logging responses of Indonesian woodpeckers, including the great slaty woodpecker.
“The lands that hunters and fishermen have conserved have allowed this bird a place to live into the 21st century. Without these people and their interest in saving bottomland forests, I doubt that the bird would have survived.”
David Luneau
University of Arkansas at Little Rock
David Luneau
B.S., electrical engineering, Rice University
M.S., electrical engineering, Georgia Tech University
David has, to date, during the Arkansas search, captured the best video of what many experts believe to be an ivory-billed woodpecker. A professor of electronics and computers at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, Luneau has been in charge of the effort to capture an image of an ivory-bill using remote cameras, and he has served as an advisor in other technical areas. Luneau was a member of the six-person Zeiss Sports Optics search team that spent a month in 2002 looking for ivory-billed woodpeckers in the Pearl River Wildlife Management Area in Louisiana. With support from the Arkansas Audubon Society Trust, he organized and led a less-extended expedition in January of 2003 to look for ivory-bills in Arkansas’ White River National Wildlife Refuge. Luneau, a native of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, resides in Little Rock.
“In the perception of ornithologists, anyone who claims to have seen an ivory-billed woodpecker without providing tangible evidence might as well claim to have seen Elvis, Bigfoot, or a UFO. Soon that will change.”
J.V. Remsen
Louisiana State University
J.V. Remsen
B.A. & M.A., biological science, Stanford University
Ph.D., zoology, University of California
Remsen is the McIlhenny Distinguished Professor of Natural Science at Louisiana State University, and he also serves as curator of birds for the university’s Museum of Natural Science. Remsen, who was an organizer of the Zeiss Sports Optics search for the ivory-bill on the Pearl River in Louisiana and who serves as a compiler of all ivory-bill reports in Louisiana, has assisted in planning the search for the ivory-bill in Arkansas. Remsen is also a member of the American Ornithologists’ Union Check-list Committee. Remsen, a native of Lakewood, Colorado, resides in St. Gabriel, Louisiana.
“The ivory-billed woodpecker epitomizes the resiliency of our natural world. If recoveries of the bald eagle and peregrine falcon weren’t enough, anyone who still doubts the efficacy of three decades of conservation need only look to the ivory-billed woodpecker for inspiration. I hope that the discovery and continued survival of this magnificent bird will finally galvanize Americans to become unified stewards of our world’s natural resources.”
Ron Rohrbaugh
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Ron Rohrbaugh
B.S. & M.S., wildlife science and ecology, Pennsylvania State University
Ron is one of the project’s co-managers and has served as the director of natural resources and visitor services at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology since 1996. Rohrbaugh has been instrumental in developing and implementing the team’s search strategy — from writing search and study protocols to interpreting aerial photography and joining the searchers in their day-to-day work. Although not previously involved with ivory-bill searches, Rohrbaugh has spent years studying and searching for rare, difficult-to-find species, such as northern goshawks, short-eared owls and Henslow’s sparrows. At Cornell, Rohrbaugh is taking the lead on developing an exhibit focused on the ecology and conservation of the ivory-billed woodpecker. The new exhibit will be a featured element at Cornell’s Johnson Center for Birds and Biodiversity. A native of central Pennsylvania, Rohrbaugh resides in Van Etten, New York.
“To me it is truly amazing that in the year 2005, places like the Big Woods of Arkansas still exist, and that we may have the opportunity to bring one of the noblest of American birds back from the brink of extinction. Plus I'd really like to see one!”
Ken Rosenberg
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Ken Rosenberg
B.S. Cornell University
M.S. Arizona State University; Ph.D.
Louisiana State University
Ken, search team leader, is the director of conservation science at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, where citizen-science and other monitoring projects focused on bird conservation issues. A long-time participant in the bird conservation consortium, Partners in Flight, and chair of PIF’s international science committee, Rosenberg co-authored the North American Landbird Conservation Plan. He spent many years studying foraging specialization in Amazonian rainforest birds. A widely known North American birder, Rosenberg serves as co-captain of the Lab’s renowned World Series of Birding team, the Sapsuckers.
Bill Shepherd
Bill, who was involved in the search for the ivory-billed woodpecker in Arkansas since the beginning of the project, is a member of the Audubon Society of Central Arkansas and a member of the National Audubon Society since the early 1950s. He is a charter member of the Arkansas Audubon Society. In addition, Shepherd joined the membership of the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology in 1969. He is a life member of The Nature Conservancy, having joined in 1970. Now retired, Shepherd worked from 1970 to 2001 in conservation of natural areas and natural diversity, first with the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission and later with the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission.
“Finding the ivory-bill in Arkansas has been a validation of decades of great conservation work by hunters, fisherman, state and federal agencies, other conservation organizations and many private landowners who are all committed to conserve the Big Woods ecosystem. This effort is an incredible story of hope for the future.”
Scott Simon
The Nature Conservancy
Scott Simon
B.S., forestry, University of Wisconsin
M.S., forestry, University of Illinois
Scott has co-led the ivory-bill search and conservation effort in Arkansas and is the director of The Nature Conservancy in Arkansas. Much of his efforts have been focused on working with Conservancy staff on expediting habitat acquisition and restoration critical to the ivory-bill’s continued survival. Simon has worked in ecological fire restoration for a dozen years and teaches courses and workshops in conservation planning, fire ecology, prescribed fire restoration, wetland ecology, wetland restoration and monitoring. From 1990 to 1996, Simon worked as a wetland ecologist for the Illinois Natural History Survey. Simon, a native of Chicago, resides in Little Rock.
John Simpson
B.S., zoology, University of Arkansas
M.D., University of Arkansas Medical School
John, a physician in family practice, is a charter member of the board of trustees for The Nature Conservancy in Arkansas. During the core search team and a part-time searcher. Simpson is also long-time birder and lifelong naturalist. Simpson is a native of El Dorado, Arkansas, and he lives in Hot Springs, Arkansas.
“There is a place [in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge] where a grove of thousand-year-old trees grows within sight of an interstate highway. I wonder which will endure. Will we invest the effort to preserve those trees that we will to preserve the highway?”
Gene Sparling
Gene Sparling
Gene, an entrepreneur and naturalist, first spotted the ivory-billed woodpecker in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge that led to the extensive search in Arkansas. Since his initial observation in February 2004, Sparling has been actively involved in the search, serving as the project’s co-manager and working in the conservation and land acquisition efforts as well as public and community relations efforts. Sparling, who began exploring the Big Woods of Arkansas in his kayak in 2003, has sought out wild and natural places throughout his life, exploring Arkansas’ Ozark and Ouachita mountains, as well the Rocky Mountains, and Mexico’s Baja Peninsula. A native of Springfield, Missouri, Sparling resides in Hot Springs, Arkansas.
“The conservation work of The Nature Conservancy in Arkansas is truly progressive, and the cooperative partnerships they have developed with both public and private landowners are an inspirational model for future conservation work throughout North America. It has been a wonderful learning opportunity to be part of this effort.”
Elliott Swarthout
Cache River National Wildlife Refuge
Elliott Swarthout
B.A., wildlife management, Prescott College
M.S., wildlife and fisheries science, University of Arizona
Since November 2004, Elliott has served as the supervisor for the field crew at the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. He has worked to implement search strategies by deploying full-time and temporary crews, troubleshooting logistical problems, and searching. A longtime birder and conservationist, Swarthout has, for 10 years, researched various birds throughout Arizona, Utah, and Sonora Mexico. From 2000 to 2004, he led fieldwork at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology for a study investigating a bacterial infection in house finches in the eastern United States.
“Playing a part in this epic search has been a thrill and a pleasure, in no small part due to the dedication, enthusiasm, and unstinting cooperation of everyone involved.”
Peter Wrege
White River National Wildlife Refuge
Peter Wrege
B.S., biology, The Colorado College
Ph.D., ecology and animal behavior, Cornell University
Peter has served as field supervisor for the crew searching the 160,000-acre White River National Wildlife Refuge. Challenges include the logistics of keeping nine to 12 enthusiastic searchers in the field, along with their canoes, johnboats, and equipment. The huge area of interest requires constant integration of the information about habitat quality and woodpecker activity coming in from scouting excursions and the field crew in order to make decisions about where to focus efforts each day. Wrege has been conducting field research on avian behavior for more than 35 years, taking him from Colorado to Venezuela, Florida, East Africa, Panama and through the local woods and fields of home in Ithaca, New York.
Douglas Zollner
Douglas is director of conservation science for The Nature Conservancy of Arkansas. His work has focused on identifying critical habitat areas necessary for the continued survival of the ivory-billed woodpecker.
We owe deep thanks to the full time search crew, as this search would not have been possible without their huge talent, effort, and sacrifice.
Gerard Phillips
John Puschock
Dana Ripper
Michelle Rogne
Matt Sarver
Justin Schuetz
Utami Setiorini
Casey Taylor
Ben Wardwell
Kristina Baker
Catherine Berchok
Jaimie Conrad
Matt Dresser
Julie Hart
Clark Jones
Nick Meyer
Lauren Morgens
Sean O'Brien
Russ Charif, Acoustic Survey Leader
Tom Calupca, Electrical Engineer
Melanie Driscoll, Volunteer Sound Analyst
Harold Figueroa, Programmer
Melissa Fowler, Acoustic Analyst
Tom Fowler, Mechanical Engineer
Beth Howard, Acoustic Analyst
Anne Klingensmith, Acoustic Analyst
Mike Pitzrick, Acoustic Analyst
Dimitri Ponirakis, Acoustic Analyst
Mike Powers, Acoustic Analysis Coordinator
Mickey Scilingo, Acoustic Analyst
Eric Spaulding, IT Engineer
Chris Tessaglia-Hymes, Acoustic Analyst
Ann Warde, Acoustic Analyst
Marc Dantzker, Video production
David Brown, Film production
Mike Anderson
Troy Bader
Evan Barbour
Jim Bednarz
Dave Bonter
Mike Braun
John Bridgeland
Ned Brinkley
Ben Clock
Andy Farnsworth
Martha Fisher
Jim Fitzpatrick
Tim Gallagher
Jeff Gerbracht
Jim Goetz
Kate Gooch
Robert Harrison
Marshall Illif
Mindy LaBranche
Mike Lanzone
Dan Lebbin
Tim Lenz
Guy Luneau
Joan Luneau
Robert Henderson
Allan Mueller
Jay McGowan
Kevin McGowan
Harold Mills
Jason Mobley
Kenny Nichols
LaDonna Nichols
Bob Nixon
Tina Phillips
Robert Potts
Caleb Putnam
Mark Reaves
Rusty Rose
Gary Rosenberg
John Ruthven
Chrissie Sant
Roger Sant
John Simpson
Roger Slothower
Timothy Spahr
Greg Spahr
Doug Stotz
Brian Sullivan
Gerrit Vyn
Michael Warriner
Jeff Wells
Mel White
Megan Whitman
David Willard
J. Lyndal York