Soon you meet complaints from well meaning persons who object
to robbing birds' nests, and you reply that you are collecting for
scientific purposes. Very good ; science has need of you all, but
do you know what scientific ornithology — real ornithology — is?
Are you not influenced, to some extent, at least, by " oological "
niagaziuL-s and dealers' price-lists of eggs, from which you learn that
it is important to secure series of sets, — which means hundreds and
thousands of eggs, — and wherein you also learn the market price of
this or that egg, and value your specimens accordingly, — just as you
do your postage stamps? This is not science, and the men who advo-
cate this sort of collecting, and who have the largest collections of
eggs, rarely contribute anything to our knowledge of birds, and are
not advancing the science of ornithology.
If you must have a collection, a few sets of eggs (often a single
set) of each species of bird will answer all your purposes. There is
nothing to be gained by the collecting of a series, except the extermi-
nation of the birds, which is surely not your object.
On the other hand, there is a vast amount of bird work that you
can do to help the science of ornithology and gain a reputation for
yourself.
There are hundreds of facts regarding the distribution of birds,
their habits, etc., which are still unknown, and you should make it
your aim to become an authority on the birds of your region, and
keep records of all your observations as to migration, habits, abun-
dance, etc. You will find ample opportunity for work, as every year
will bring to light new facts, and the more you contribute to our
knowledge of the birds the more you will see what an insignificant
matter the formation of an egg collection is in comparison with real
ornithology.
In the case of birds, it is justifiable to shoot specimens which
are new to you for purposes of identification, but you should make
the best use of the bird before you kill it, so that it will not be
necessary to shoot more of the same kind in order to tell what they
are. Your aim should be to learn to recognize birds at sight and
by their notes, and you will find you will learn more of value by a
study of the living bird than by collecting skins.
The exact knowledge that we now possess of the coloration, etc.,
of North American birds, and the large collections available for study
in the museums, render it entirely unnecessary for every bird student
to form a collection. Those who undertake any special line of study
will soon learn what specimens are required and collect accordingly,
instead of amassing a large number of specimens with no particular
object in view.
Page:Bird-lore Vol 01.djvu/140
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