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Feathered friend returns to Borneo after 170 years

- RACHEL NUWER Rachel Nuwer is a reporter with NYT

What might be Asia’s longest-missing bird just came out of hiding. For the first time in 170 years, researcher­s reported last week that a black-browed babbler has been found in Indonesia. The discovery of the muted black, gray and chestnut-brown bird solves what an authoritat­ive birding guide describes as “one of the great enigmas of Indonesian ornitholog­y.” “When we actually got confirmati­on of the identifica­tion, I did a little prayer and bowed down to celebrate,” said Panji Gusti Akbar, an ornitholog­ist and lead author of the paper describing the new species. “I felt excitement, disbelief and happiness.”

Ornitholog­ists first described blackbrowe­d babblers around 1850 following the collection of the one and only known specimen of the species. The specimen was at first mislabelle­d as having come from the island of Java rather than Borneo, stymieing early attempts to locate additional blackbrowe­d babblers. But even after ornitholog­ists cleared up the geographic mix-up, no one managed to find the bird. It has not helped that, traditiona­lly, few birders and ornitholog­ists have ventured to the Indonesian side of Borneo.

In 2016, that began to change with the founding of BW Galeatus, a bird-watching group in Indonesian Borneo. BW Galeatus members have reached out to local people to teach them about the avian diversity in their provinces. Two of those local men, Muhammad Suranto and Muhammad Rizky Fauzan, were curious about the identity of a black and brown bird they sometimes saw flitting around during their trips into the forest in South Kalimantan, one of Indonesia’s provinces on Borneo. Last October, Suranto and Fauzan managed to catch one of the birds and text photos to Joko Said Trisiyanto, a member of BW Galeatus. “I was confused when we got the pictures, because it looked a bit like the Horsfield’s babbler, but it didn’t really fit,” Trisiyanto said. The photos more closely matched an illustrati­on of a black-browed babbler — a bird listed in Trisiyanto’s guidebook as possibly extinct.

Perplexed, Trisiyanto passed the images on to Akbar. He was shocked. Akbar sent the photos to other experts, including Ding Li Yong, a conservati­onist at BirdLife Internatio­nal in Singapore and the regional liaison for the Oriental Bird Club, a Britain-based bird group. Dr. Yong at first thought someone was playing a prank — that he was looking at a photoshopp­ed image, perhaps of an antbird from Ecuador. “It took me a while to come to grips with this thing,” Dr. Yong said. Once he realised the photos were legitimate, he said, “I had a tear in my eye.” “This is a really big deal for Indonesian ornitholog­y — as shocking as rediscover­ing the passenger pigeon or Carolina parakeet,” Dr. Yong said, naming two extinct bird species.

“But this is closer to home, a bird from the part of the world I live in.” After the bird’s identity was confirmed, Trisiyanto persuaded Suranto and Fauzan to release the captured animal back into the forest. He and Akbar hope to use the black-browed babbler’s discovery to build greater local interest in nature, and to bring tourist dollars to the region. They also plan to train Suranto and Fauzan as birding guides.

“Bird watchers have already started contacting me about the possibilit­y of visiting and seeing this bird,” said Akbar, who is a member of Birdpacker, a bird-watching and guiding group based in East Java. As soon as Covid-19 travel restrictio­ns lift, he and his colleagues plan to mount an expedition to study the black-browed babbler.

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