The images, by Dr. Michael Collins, are purported to be of ivory-billed woodpeckers living in Louisiana. Dr. Michael Collins’s images are via Wildlife Extra.

An amateur birdwatcher claims that photographs and audio recordings, which he took, are of ivory-billed woodpeckers living around the Pearl River area of Louisiana. Apparently, his evidence has been dismissed by the professional ornithological community. Nonetheless, he defends the authenticity of his data and is publishing his work in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. Via LiveScience.com:
[Michael] Collins is an outsider to the ornithology community—he’s just a hobbyist bird-watcher—and few insiders take his work seriously. His evidence has been rejected by a string of ornithology journals – often, he says, without explanation.
And so he has turned to acoustics scientists to confirm his recordings. This month he will finally publish what he believes is solid evidence that ivory-billed woodpeckers live at Pearl River in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.
Collins, a researcher at the Naval Research Laboratory-Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, first started searching for the bird when a team of Cornell ornithologists captured putative footage of a specimen in Arkansas in 2005. That possible sighting, the first well-documented (though not definitive) human encounter since about 1940, made it onto the cover of Science Magazine. The birds were said to have lived at Pearl River in the past, so when Collins heard that they might still exist as a species, he decided to look for them there.
. . .
The audio recordings, which he obtained in conjunction with the videos, also smack of the Lord God bird, which makes very distinct double knocks when pecking, and makes vocalizations somewhat like a blue jay’s and nothing like a pileated woodpecker’s. Collins used his mathematics expertise to construct sophisticated acoustical models of the bird’s vocalizations. The audio and video evidence combined, he says, give firm support to his claim that ivory-billed woodpeckers live at Pearl River.
. . .
“Professional jealousy is a huge problem in the field of ornithology,” Collins said. “There are groups who have received a lot of funding to obtain conclusive data on these birds and haven’t managed to do so, and I’ve done it independently.” One such group, he said, is the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the country’s leading center of ornithology research and the group who may have sighted the elusive woodpecker in 2005.
. . .
The Cornell group, which Collins accuses of having exerted its influence to keep his work out of ornithology journals, commented briefly on his new acoustics paper. ”Although we believe the evidence presented is inconclusive, we applaud Collins’s continued efforts to locate and document possible ivory-billed woodpeckers and to publish his findings for all to evaluate,” Kenneth Rosenberg, director of conservation science in the group, said.
You can read the rest of this article at LiveScience.com. More on Collins’s claims can be found at Wildlife Extra.


