For the most part, birding is a calm, peaceful activity, perfect for those with lots of patience, time, and of course, a love of birds. But the hobby can attract some unsavory personalities, too. Emily Graslie, chief curiosity correspondent at the Chicago Field Museum, found this out when she discovered that one of her employer鈥檚 specimens had been donated by an infamous murderer.
As part of her educational series (above), Graslie of a Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler that was donated to the Field Museum in 1924 by , shortly after he killed a 14-year-old boy. But it wasn鈥檛 just the plot twist that drew Graslie to the well-preserved, yellow-and-blue bird.
鈥淲hat I love about this Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler is that not only is it an important specimen scientifically, it's also contributing to a greater knowledge about a rare and increasingly difficult-to-study and -document bird,鈥 Graslie says.
Today, the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler is endangered and hardly accessible in the wild. But the way Leopold acquired the specimen back in 1923 was also probably illegal, says Chicago-area naturalist Joel Greenberg. Leopold had a city-issued license to shoot and collect birds, but he didn鈥檛 have permits to collect Kirtland鈥檚 Warblers, which would have been protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.
But conservation laws weren鈥檛 as strict back then, Greenberg says, and so, Leopold went about pilfering from the few Kirtland鈥檚 nests that he found. There had only been two or three sightings in the region until he started his search, with the first record in 1903 in northeast Michigan (by Leopold鈥檚 professor and mentor, Norman Wood). Experts at the time assumed the bird was rare, but its conservation wasn鈥檛 as much of a concern鈥攐nly in the 1950s did researchers begin monitoring the species with care.
Leopold, for whatever reason, developed a Kirtland鈥檚 fixation, and was said to be the person who knew most about the warbler at the time. He discovered that it was being parasitized by Brown-headed Cowbirds, a fact that justified . He also made two separate trips to collect Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler specimens in Michigan and delivered a paper on it at the American Ornithological Union meeting in 1923.
Then the next year, Leopold and his alleged lover Richard Loeb committed the that earned them both lengthy prison sentences. (The motive was murky, but was chalked up to a morbid game, or challenge, for the two.) After killing the boy, who was Loeb's cousin, they dumped his body in a culvert south of Chicago and mailed a ransom note to his family. Investigators, however, were able to trace a pair of glasses that fell out of Leopold鈥檚 pocket back to him and his accomplice.
When Leopold learned of his sentencing, he set aside 10 specimens from his avian collection of thousands that he deemed of greatest scientific value. Those specimens, including the infamous Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler, ended up at the Field Museum. More than 30 years later, after Leopold was paroled, one of the first things he did was visit the museum. He also took a trip to the warbler鈥檚 nesting habitat before moving to Puerto Rico to study and write about birds for the rest of his diabetes-plagued life.
Of course, the Kirtland鈥檚 Warbler isn鈥檛 the only Field Museum resident with a bizarre past. Graslie says that each of the museum鈥檚 30 million specimens has a story, and she鈥檚 determined to tell as many as she can. In installment of 60 Second Specimens, Graslie focused on sooty avian specimens from the 1880s, whose feathers told the story of black-carbon pollution over a period of 135 years.
Whether donated by a murdering birder or picked up off the sidewalk after flying into a building, every specimen at the Field Museum has its importance, says Ben Marks, the museum鈥檚 collection manager of birds. 鈥淭here's a ton of amazing ways that our specimens can be used, ways that the people that collected them couldn't have even imagined would be possible.鈥
Correction: As our astute readers pointed out, the murder of Richard Loeb's young cousin was a grisly affair and did not involve any grizzly bears.