Ask Helen James about her favorite birds, and she鈥檒l give you a strange list of contenders: the ibis that noses through the island leaf litter, pretending it鈥檚 a kiwi; the duck with such bad eyesight it simply feels its way around; and the long-legged owl that makes its kills in broad daylight.
These were real birds that once lived on the Hawaiian Islands where James, a paleontologist, hunts for fossilized avian remains from the Quaternary Period. After excavating the bones, she takes them back to her lab at the in Washington, D.C., where she compares them against 60,000 modern specimens. By matching the anatomies, she can narrow down the extinct species鈥 diet, appearance, and sensory features. 鈥淵ou build up to a point where you can begin to see the bird itself, just from the bones,鈥 James says.
Since she began visiting the islands four decades ago, James has discovered and described close to 40 bygone species. The biggest fossil gold mines for flightless birds, she says, are the vast underground cave systems formed by volcanic eruptions; the animals would fall into the maze-like tunnels and become enshrined in the dark, insect-free environment. Some of the caves are comfortable enough to walk or crawl in. Others, James says, are covered in jagged edges.
While reconstructs what鈥檚 been lost forever, it also has a larger purpose: to help protect Hawaii鈥檚 remaining diversity. Spelunking around the lava tubes, she sometimes finds centuries- or millennia-old skeletons of species that are still around today but are endangered. These fossils indicate the bird鈥檚 historical presence and, in turn, point to the habitat that needs to be protected for it to rebound.
That principle is already at play. Seventy years ago, Hawaii鈥檚 state bird, the N膿n膿, could be found only on the Big Island, with the wild population down to 30 individuals. But since a captive breeding program introduced the goose to Kauai鈥檚 lowlands鈥攖he same environment that James鈥檚 research determined their ancestors loved鈥攖he species is thriving once again. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is also talking about bringing the extirpated back to the main islands based on fossil evidence. It鈥檚 not quite raising the dead鈥攋ust using their long-buried secrets to guide survival.