If a bird thought to be extinct for six decades can turn up alive and well in the dense swamps of Arkansas, then why not South Carolina or Georgia?
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"We've designed a search that will enable us to have six two-person crews on the ground at any given time," said wildlife biologist Jennifer Koches of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service's field office in Charleston, S.C.
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Last summer, however, ornithologists led by a team from Cornell University documented a small group of ivory-bills living within the 56,000-acre Cache River wildlife refuge of Arkansas.
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The Fish & Wildlife Service will use about $75,000 in grants to buy cameras and audio recording gear that volunteers - who are being trained by Cornell ornithologists - will take into the field.
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Funds for the search are part of a broader program in which states where the bird once lived can seek federal assistance for reconnaissance programs. So far, Texas, Alabama, South Carolina and Georgia have applied.
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3 comments:
speaking of groupthink... he even uses the same terminology you do
I just Googled "groupthink" and got 539,000 hits.
I think it's possible that some people using that term haven't even read this blog...
Tom, virtually EVERYONE who is interested in the Ivorybill has read your blog...
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