Thursday, February 19, 2009

From the "I hate when that happens" department

Fox news has an interesting story about a rare bird, thought to be extinct. It was sighted. It was captured. It was eaten.

Philippines: A bird suspected to be extinct was reportedly photographed for the first time in the Philippines, and then sold to a poultry market as food.

Worcester's buttonquail was known only through illustrations based on decades-old museum specimens until a television crew documented the live bird in the market before it was sold in January, NationalGeographic.com reported.

Scientists had suspected the bird, found only on the island of Luzon, to be extinct, according to NationalGeographic.com.

Wild Bird Club of the Philippines President Michael Lu, told the Agence France-Press news agency that it’s unfortunate that the locals aren't more conscious of the threatened wildlife around them.

"What if this was the last of its species?" he said.

Mr Lu asked: "What if it was the last of its species?" The obvious answer: then it doesn’t really matter much, does it?

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