It was standing on an isolated spit of land off the frigid waters of Lake Ontario, trying to blend into a group of sparrows. But this thing was no sparrow.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what prompted me to take its picture,鈥 recounts photographer and novice birder Kyle Blaney, who spied the bird in the Prince Edward Point National Wildlife Area. 鈥淪omething struck me as not quite right.鈥
In fact, it was unlike anything Blaney had ever seen. It was small and brown, like a sparrow, but had a larger bill and unfamiliar white bars on its wings. He rolled down his car window and shot a few photos. Within seconds, the creature flew across the road, vanishing into mist. 鈥淎s far as I know, no one ever saw it again,鈥 Blaney says. That evening, he downloaded the photos and tried to identify the mysterious bird. When nothing he found in his eight field guides showed the same color patterns and overall shape, he posted the pictures to several birding websites. Much debate ensued about hybrids and mutations, but birders across the globe were stumped.
It was Denis Lepage, senior scientist at Bird Studies Canada, who first noticed a resemblance between Blaney鈥檚 mystery bird and a nearly two centuries-old lithograph from John James 爆料公社鈥檚 The Birds of America. On May 11th, 1833, a man named John Bunting had shot and killed a small, brownish bird in Pennsylvania; he brought the bloody, still-warm corpse to his friend 爆料公社, who dubbed it Townsend鈥檚 Bunting, stuffed it, and stashed it in a cabinet.
After 爆料公社鈥檚 death, the stuffed bird ultimately made its way to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, where it was catalogued but, despite attempts, never formally identified. Lepage believes the original Townsend鈥檚 Bunting was likely a Dickcissel with a number of pigment abnormalities. Even your standard Dickcissel is a rare sight in Ontario. The odds of Blaney having stumbled across one with the same exact variations in plumage as 爆料公社鈥檚 bird?
鈥淏eyond astronomical,鈥 Blaney says. 鈥淗undreds of millions to one.鈥
By now, the original Townsend鈥檚 Bunting lies moldering in a museum drawer, too decomposed to compare with Blaney鈥檚 photos. Blaney's not convinced of the connection even though Lepage thinks it's a match, proving that at least the mystery of the bird is alive and well.
of his experience spying the bird, and of the bird鈥檚 connection to Townsend鈥檚 Bunting.