Extinction obituary: why experts weep for the quiet and beautiful Hawaiian po’ouli

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Frantic conservation efforts couldn’t save the tiny, intricately colored songbird, whose obit is the first in our new series of memorials for species that have gone extinct in living memory

The Hawaiian po’ouli: ‘I’m crying for it again now.’
The Hawaiian po’ouli: ‘I’m crying for it again now.’Illustration: Ricardo Macia Lalinde/The Guardian

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Helen Sullivan

@helenrsullivanWed 4 May 2022 03.00 EDT

The last po’ouli died in an unusual nest. Too weak to perch, the brownish-greyish songbird rested in a small towel twisted into a ring. He was the last of his species, the last in fact of an entire group of finches, and occurred nowhere on Earth outside its native Hawaii. For weeks, as scientists tried to find him a mate,he had been getting sicker. The only remaining po’ouli had just one eye. Alone in the towel, alone in all the world, he closed it.

He…

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