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The Market in Birds - Commercial Hunting, Conservation, and the Origins of Wildlife Consumerism, 1850-1920 (Hardcover)
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The Market in Birds - Commercial Hunting, Conservation, and the Origins of Wildlife Consumerism, 1850-1920 (Hardcover)
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A fascinating look at how a commercial market for birds in the late
nineteenth century set the stage for conservation and its
legislation. Between the end of the Civil War and the 1920s, the
United States witnessed the creation, rapid expansion, and then
disappearance of a commercial market for hunted wild animals. The
bulk of commercial wildlife sales in the last part of the
nineteenth century were of wildfowl, who were prized not only for
their eggs and meat but also for their beautiful feathers. Wild
birds were brought to cities in those years to be sold as food for
customers' tables, decorations for ladies' hats, treasured pets,
and specimens for collectors' cabinets. Though relatively
short-lived, this market in birds was broadly influential, its rise
and fall coinciding with the birth of the Progressive Era
conservation movement. In The Market in Birds, historian Andrea L.
Smalley and wildlife biologist Henry M. Reeves illuminate this
crucial chapter in American environmental history. Touching on
ecology, economics, law, and culture, the authors reveal how
commercial hunting set the terms for wildlife conservation and the
first federal wildlife legislation at the turn of the twentieth
century. Smalley and Reeves delve into the ground-level
interactions among market hunters, game dealers, consumers,
sportsmen, conservationists, and the wild birds they all wanted.
Ultimately, they argue, wildfowl commercialization represented a
revolutionary shift in wildlife use, turning what had been a mostly
limited, local, and seasonal trade into an interstate
industrial-capitalist enterprise. In the process, it provoked a
critical public debate over the value of wildlife in a modern
consumer culture. By the turn of the twentieth century, the authors
reveal, it was clear that wild bird populations were declining
precipitously all over North America. The looming possibility of a
future without birds sparked intense debate nationwide and
eventually culminated in the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act.
Scholars, environmentalists, wildlife professionals, and anyone
concerned about wildlife will find this new perspective on
conservation history enlightening reading.
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