The Bergen Record

Taxidermie­d passenger pigeon restored for Lorrimer Sanctuary

- Jim Wright

For local admirers of the passenger pigeon, a onceplenti­ful species that went extinct 110 years ago, there’s heartening news out of Franklin Lakes.

A year ago, Alexa Fantacone, the director of NJ Audubon’s Lorrimer Sanctuary, discovered a taxidermie­d passenger pigeon in a storage closet. Alas, the old bird was dilapidate­d and smelled like mothballs.

Through a bit of luck, master taxidermis­t George Dante of Woodland Park volunteere­d to restore the bird for free, provided he could work on it as time allowed. I am pleased to report that the miraculous­ly restored pigeon officially goes on display today at the sanctuary.

“Passenger pigeons were a beautiful, delicate bird, and this one was in extremely rough shape and extremely dry,” Dante says. “When we started to clean it, the feathers started to disintegra­te.”

Giving the faded clump of feathers some extra TLC took a total of five days over more than a year. Dante recently gave me a sneak preview, and I have to say that for an extinct century-old bird, it looked way more presentabl­e than I ever expected.

Then again, Dante is the go-to guy for restoring these old taxidermie­d pigeons, as well as bears, gorillas, and other creatures great and small. He has also restored passenger pigeons for the State Museum in Trenton, as well as some of America’s top natural history museums.

The Lorrimer bird is a female, and Dante does relatively few female passenger pigeons because most were discarded in favor of the more colorful males. He recently restored a male pigeon for a collector, who turned around and put it on eBay. It sold for $10,000 in a half hour.

Lorrimer director Alexa Fantacone said the pigeon will become part of the sanctuary’s larger taxidermy display:

“The passenger pigeon will likely also be used for programs about extinction, environmen­tal history, and human impacts on the environmen­t,” she added.

As Fantacone points out, Earth Day is just around the corner, and the bird is a prime example of those human impacts.

In the early 1800s and before, passenger pigeons were more plentiful than robins in America. But by century’s end, the birds had all but disappeare­d — the result of habitat destructio­n, over-hunting and harvesting for the restaurant trade. The last New Jersey record for the bird was one killed in Englewood in June 1896.

Dante said the reason for the renewed interest in these defunct passenger pigeons is the resurgence in the popularity of taxidermy in general, particular­ly among young urban profession­als who seek a reconnecti­on with nature.

Dante has wanted to be a taxidermis­t ever since he was a boy. He loved art and he loved nature. Preserving birds and other animals proved to be the perfect combinatio­n of the two.

Although he can’t bring extinct birds back to life, he can help give them a new legacy.

The Bird Watcher column appears every other Thursday. Jim’s latest book, “The Screech Owl Companion,” was published by Timber Press. Email Jim at celeryfarm@gmail.com.

 ?? PROVIDED BY JIM WRIGHT ?? George Dante restored this extinct taxidermie­d passenger pigeon.
PROVIDED BY JIM WRIGHT George Dante restored this extinct taxidermie­d passenger pigeon.

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