The biggest reason was over hunting, but deforestation also contributed. The Passenger Pigeon was the largest species of birds, during the 1800's. It contained more individuals than all other North American birds combined. But sadly, by 1900s that powerful population had been reduced to one bird named," Martha" who died on September 1, 1914 in captivity at the Cincinnati Zoo. At one time a single flock of passenger pigeons might have more than 2 billion birds. That is just one flock, there were many flocks in the US at the time of this bird's peak of abundance. But, unregulated commercial hunting, specifically for their meat, on a wholesale scale, used those large billion bird flocks to man's advantage and it devastated the birds populations. The species migration and nesting habits also made them easy targets for large number kills, either by netting, torching, or special firearms, even one, the forerunner of the machine gun. By 1855 one year in Michigan a billion birds were, so called "harvested". The passenger pigeon's population, of course suffered a collapse under the strain, and could not recover. There were no protection measures, no conservation lands. The pigeons left were scattered across the US and that made breeding difficult and the numbers continued to decline. By 1900 all wild passenger pigeons were extinct. Now, with today's knowledge, some believe that the species should have been able to recover from the uncontrolled commercial hunting, but the scattering of the birds may have been the final straw. The large flocks may have been part of their rituals for breeding and once scattered these rituals were not triggered, therefore the breeding declined and the species suffered extinction. For more details, please see sites listed below.
The passenger pigeon went extinct because of hunters over hunting the animal and habitat loss.
The last known passenger pigeon died in 1914.
The main difference is that passenger pigeons are extinct. Also, regular pigeons now are much less attractive in color that passenger pigeons were.
Peregrine Falcons are the most threat for your pigeons.
It's possible that scavengers like foxes and raccoons would have benefited from a continued presence of passenger pigeons due to the abundance of food. Similarly, certain bird species that may have relied on the pigeons as a food source or for nesting sites could have also experienced changes in their populations due to the extinction of passenger pigeons.
Passenger pigeons would fly in large flocks in Wisconsin and other states in the 1800s.
The passenger lived in the forests of eastern North America.
Messenger pigeons are domesticated Rock Pigeons,Columba livia domestica, that are trained to fly and return to humans. Passenger pigeons were a wild species.
Ectopistes Migratorious.
Passenger Pigeons became endangered through overhunting and habitat loss.
start of the airplane
Passenger pigeons were hunted by natives as a source of food. Here are several ways the natives hunted the passenger pigeons:killing the juveniles at night with long polessetting up large nests to capture the adult pigeonslow flying pigeons could be killed by throwing sticks and stonesCherokees killed pigeons by throwing their club at the leading pigeon in the morning when it left its roost
dodos, elephant birds, passenger pigeons