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	<title>Chestertown &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>On With The Story: Remembering Iconic Maryland Novelist John Barth</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 2024 19:48:41 +0000</pubDate>
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			<p><strong><em>[Editor&#8217;s Note: </em></strong><em>Iconic postmodernist writer John Barth, who called Maryland&#8217;s Eastern Shore home, passed away on April 2, 2024 at the age of 93. Below is our 2008 profile of Barth, for which former arts and culture editor John Lewis spent time with him in Chestertown, in the autumn of his years.]</em></p>
<p>John Barth still gets a charge out of being mentioned in a pull quote. Even after decades of circulating in the upper echelons of literary fiction, that sort of acknowledgment hasn’t lost its visceral appeal.</p>
<p>In fact, if you perused <em>The New York Times</em> Book Review a few weeks back, you may have noticed an ad on the inside cover comparing Hannah Tinti’s <em>The Good Thief</em> to Barth’s “picaresque classic, <em>The Sot-Weed Factor</em>.”</p>
<p>A certain iconic author noticed it.</p>
<p>“I did see that,” says Barth, between bites of mahi-mahi and sips of pinot grigio at The Imperial Hotel in his hometown of Chestertown. “It’s very pleasant. If you’re a novelist, you hope that your stuff stays in print and that someone still remembers you.”</p>
<p>Actually, neither seems to be much of a problem for Barth. A stroll to The Compleat Bookseller down the street confirms that his work remains in print; the shop stocks no less than four Barth novels. And at this point, Barth has attained that rare pinnacle of respect for a contemporary author: adjective status. In lit circles, to be “Barthian” is to be post-modern, meta-fictive, and engaged in the sort of intellectual gamesmanship that gives rise to honorary degrees and graduate seminars.</p>
<p>Barth gets mentioned regularly in the same breath as Pynchon, Nabokov, Vonnegut, and even Joyce. He’s been called “one of the greatest novelists of our time” (<em>The Washington Post</em>), “a master of language” (<em>Chicago Sun-Times</em>), “a genius” (<em>Playboy</em>), “perhaps the most prodigally gifted comic novelist writing in English today” (<em>Newsweek</em>), and “a comic genius of the highest order” (<em>The New York Times</em>).</p>
<p>He’s swooped in and out of the mainstream, sparked lively debates, inspired a younger generation of innovative scribes, and even infiltrated the Axis of Evil. (Barth recently learned that he’d won a literary prize in Iran and four of his books have been translated into Russian.) Throw in a National Book Award (for <em>Chimera</em> in 1973), grants from the Rockefeller Foundation and the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and you have more than a distinguished career: You have a legacy to consider.</p>
<p>So why the self-deprecating talk about being remembered? It can’t be the pinot grigio talking—he’s still on his first glass. The ruminations of a reluctant genius? No, Barth fully embraces his prodigious gifts as a writer and doesn’t shy from his status as a man of letters. He’s refreshingly old school that way, thinking of such things as badges of honor earned during a half century working at this craft.</p>
<p>No, it’s more likely attributable to another presence at the table: Father Time. Barth, who turns 79 next May, appears to be remarkably fit and says he’s in good health—he’d seen three doctors the previous day and gotten a thumbs-up from each of them. Still, he feels “the law of averages hanging over me like the Sword of Damocles.”</p>
<blockquote>
<h4>Barth gets mentioned regularly in the same breath as Pynchon, Nabokov, Vonnegut, and even Joyce. He’s been called “one of the greatest novelists of our time.”</h4>
</blockquote>
<p>He’s well aware that he hasn’t published a full-length novel since 2001’s <em>Coming Soon!!!</em>, despite being, by his own account, “a novelist by temperament and not a short story writer—a marathoner and not a sprinter.”</p>
<p>His last few books have nonetheless been comprised of short stories or novellas. A new book, <em>The Development</em>, continues along those lines by stringing together nine related stories, all of them set in a gated community on the Eastern Shore.</p>
<p>“I guess I’m getting older,” says Barth, “but I’ve always been fascinated by short forms. And it doesn’t matter to me if critics find that the things I’ve written recently don’t measure up to some earlier book. Now, I’m writing for my own pleasure, and, I hope, the pleasure of some readers. I’m just happy to be in print, with a publisher. Never mind that the advances go down, and the print runs get smaller.”</p>
<p>That may be so, but one thing hasn’t changed: Barth relishes being a storyteller, (not so) plain and (not so) simple.</p>
<p>In conversation, Barth can sound downright annotated, like the meta-fiction guru he is. As practiced by disciples such as recently deceased David Foster Wallace, it’s a style that allows commentary on not just the plot, but also the devices being used to tell the story. Much like his novels, he diverts to contexts and definitions that move the discussion laterally.</p>
<p>When speaking of novellas, for instance, Barth notes, “The market for them is gone.” He adds commentary (“the novella is an interesting form that was popular from the time it was invented”), along with when (the 18th-century), where (Germany), and who popularized it (Goethe). He opines that novellas embody “a lovely narrative space.” He then playfully defines a novella as “a work of fiction too long to sell to a magazine and too short to sell to a book publisher.” And finally, he offers advice from one who knows: “When you perpetrate one, you usually need to add on a few short stories [in order to sell it].”</p>
<p>He comes across as cerebral and urbane, a refined academic. His table manners are impeccable, and he refers to the waiter as “chap.” If you guessed he was from Cambridge, you’d be correct. But that wouldn’t be England’s renowned university town. And it’s not Cambridge, Massachusetts, home to Harvard. Rather, it’s Cambridge, Maryland, known primarily for its crabs and oysters, mosquitoes, and <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/eastern-shore-begins-to-reckon-with-difficult-history-racism-slavery/">racial unrest</a> in the 1960’s.</p>
<p>Barth lived on Aurora Street in East Cambridge, a neighborhood full of maple trees and modest homes. He had two siblings: an older brother, Bill, and a twin sister, Jill. After family and friends took to calling him Jack, Barth reckons he heard every imaginable variation on the nursery rhyme.</p>
<p>His father had a shop, Whitey’s Candyland—which Barth describes as a “Norman Rockwell-ish small town soda fountain”—on Race Street, between Carton’s clothing store and the old Opera House. The irony of having a store called Whitey’s, on Race Street, during the racial upheavals of the 1960’s is not lost on Barth.</p>
<p>“Can you imagine?” he asks, shaking his head. He then lauds the fact that his hometown recently elected an African-American woman as mayor.</p>
<p>In Cambridge though, there’s scant public recognition of Barth: no markers in front of the Aurora Street house or at Whitey’s old location, and the house on Water Street where Barth wrote his first novel, <em>The Floating Opera</em>, remains similarly unadorned.</p>
<p>But at the mention of the name Barth, the current owner of the Water Street house, out sweeping his sidewalk, lights up. “He was a natural storyteller, the best you ever heard,” says Wayne Warner. “He was extremely erudite.”</p>
<p>But Warner isn’t talking about Jack; he’s talking about Whitey. “If Jack could write as well as his father talked, he’d really be doing something,” he says. “It seems like Jack takes 10 pages to tell something that could be told in one.”</p>
<p>Warner knows his house merits a footnote in literary history, but he’d still rather discuss Whitey’s skills as an after-dinner speaker. “He was genuinely funny,” he says, smiling and nodding his head.</p>
<p>Barth, himself, addressed the subject in the Spring 2007 issue of <em>The American Scholar</em>. “Whitey came into his own as an entertainer, in demand year after year,” he wrote. “Never a clown, he was a humorist locally renowned for his joke-telling from at least the early 1940’s until his death in February 1980.”</p>
<p>Besides passing along the comic storytelling and longevity genes, Whitey, who dropped out of high school, helped expose his son to popular and modernist fiction. Barth devoured the paperbacks his father stocked at the shop, and it was there that he first encountered books by Raymond Chandler, James M. Cain, and H.P. Lovecraft, along with William Faulkner’s <em>Sanctuary</em> and John Dos Passos’ <em>Manhattan Transfer</em>. That was better than he got at school, even though he was on an academic track—as opposed to the agricultural and commercial tracks.</p>
<p>He graduated from high school largely unschooled. In fact, Barth has said, “Nothing since kindergarten prepared me for [college]” and noted that, at his high school, career counseling amounted to a 10-minute talk with the phys-ed teacher.</p>
<p>As a teen, he’d developed a love of jazz, so he figured he’d try his hand at music. He was a competent drummer, but imagined becoming an arranger like Billy Strayhorn or Pete Rugolo. He enrolled in a summer session at Juilliard, where he was placed in elementary theory and advanced orchestration classes, which indicated something of a gap in his musical knowledge. He soaked up New York’s jazz scene, listening to the likes of Illinois Jacquet in Harlem clubs, and applied himself in class. But by summer’s end, he left Juilliard convinced he had little more than “an amateur flair” for music.</p>
<p>He returned to Cambridge and learned he’d won an academic scholarship to Johns Hopkins University. Barth arrived in Baltimore in the fall of 1947. He declared a journalism major and quickly learned it wasn’t his forte. But as part of the major, he was required to take a fiction or poetry class. He opted for fiction.</p>
<p>“It was the opposite of what happened at Juilliard, where I thought I had some talent,” he told <em>Baltimore</em> in 2004. “When I stumbled into fiction, I had the unequivocal feeling that this was my true calling: All I had to do was learn it from scratch!”</p>
<p>He augmented his rigorous coursework with plenty of outside reading, some of it done while working at the campus library or the Chevrolet plant on Broening Highway. At the library, he shelved rare editions and pored over the likes of a classic, multivolume edition of <em>One Thousand and One Nights</em>. At the auto plant, he worked the night shift as a floor checker, making sure all the assembly line workers were present and accounted for. It was a job that left him plenty of time to read.</p>
<p>“I plowed through The Harvard Classics, one after the other,” he says. “I started with volume one and proceeded to volume two and three and went through the entire shelf from left to right.”</p>
<p>It was a sign of his “anal-compulsive ness,” says Barth, before adding that he often “resists being taught by others.”</p>
<blockquote>
<h4>“It was the opposite of what happened at Juilliard, where I thought I had some talent. When I stumbled into fiction, I had the unequivocal feeling that this was my true calling: All I had to do was learn it from scratch!”</h4>
</blockquote>
<p>Still, university life agreed with him, and he pretty much spent the next 50 years at college. He graduated from Hopkins, enrolled in the university’s doctoral program, dropped out, and landed a teaching job at Penn State. It was an entry-level position, one that required him to either get a Ph.D. or publish a book within three years. Barth wrote <em>The Floating Opera</em>, about an eccentric Cambridge attorney’s existential hijinks, the summer after his first year at Penn State and began circulating the manuscript to various publishing houses. Six of them turned it down.</p>
<p>By that time, he was married with three children, and the pressure was enormous. To his great relief, the seventh publisher bought the manuscript, thereby solidifying his standing at Penn State and launching his career in academia. He got another boost when <em>The Floating Opera</em> was nominated for a National Book Award in 1956.</p>
<p>He remained at State College for 12 years, moved to SUNY/Buffalo for the next eight, and landed back at Hopkins in 1973, all the while penning increasingly dense, shape-shifting works such as <em>The Sot-Weed Factor</em>, <em>Chimera</em>, <em>Lost in the Funhouse</em>, and <em>The Tidewater Tales</em>.</p>
<p>Such books made Barth’s literary reputation, but they also baffled some readers. The same <em>New York Times</em> that dubbed Barth a “comic genius” also referred to some of his books as “tomes that only an English professor, and not all of them, would take down and spend time with.”</p>
<p>Undeterred, Barth consistently upped the ante by challenging his readers and himself, and teaching helped him reinvent and reconsider his methods. At Hopkins, he chaired the Writing Seminars and mentored hotshot writers.</p>
<p>“He took it all very seriously,” says Tristan Davies, a former student of Barth’s who is currently a Senior Lecturer at the Writing Seminars. “He ran a very disciplined workshop and wasn’t an oppressive presence at all, in part, because he was able to take genius-level material and distill it into thoughtful observation. Maybe he got that from Whitey.”</p>
<p>Barth also insisted on teaching an introductory fiction class for undergraduates. “I deliberately called it ‘Rudiments of Fiction,’” he says. “It was fiction writing 101, although it was actually below that level. Teaching that class gave me a chance to think about first principles: What is a story? What is fiction? It may be a postmod approach, but I liked thinking about those sort of things at least once a week.”</p>
<p>He did that for 22 years, until retiring from Hopkins in 1995.</p>
<p>Back at The Imperial Hotel, a woman on her way to an adjacent dining room spots Barth, does a double take, and interrupts. “John Barth?” she asks. “The famous John Barth?” She approaches his table and introduces herself. “Do I know you?” he asks, a bit sheepishly, as if this might be a senior moment. “I’ve heard you speak at Washington College several times,” she says, “and I<br />
used to deliver your mail.”</p>
<p>Recognition flashes across Barth’s face, as she continues: “I was always interested in the postcards you wrote. I practically drove off the road trying to read them.”</p>
<p>Barth ignores the invasion of privacy issues raised by such a comment and, instead, praises her performance. “I don’t want to besmirch your successor,” he says, “but our mail delivery used to be much more punctual than it is these days. You did an excellent job.”</p>
<p>She thanks him and departs, looking pleased.</p>
<p>“That’s life in Chestertown,” says Barth, looking pleased himself.</p>
<p>Since his retirement, Barth and his second wife, Shelly, split their time be tween a house on Langford Creek, near Chestertown, and a second home in Bonita Springs, Florida. They visit Barth’s three children, who are scattered across the country, when they’re able. These<br />
days, the couple only comes to Baltimore for what Barth calls the five D’s: doctors, dentists, department stores, delicatessens, and dining out.</p>
<p>No matter the locale, Barth still writes every day. After breakfast, he does stretching exercises to warm up “body and spirit,” he says. Then, he goes to his desk and puts in wax earplugs, a habit from when his children were little. He reviews a printout of the previous day’s effort, usually two to four pages, uncaps his Parker 51 pen—purchased at an English stationery store that advertised itself as the original site of “Mr. Pumblechook’s Premises” from Dickens’s <em>Great Expectations</em>—and begins to write.</p>
<p>His first draft is always composed on loose-leaf paper in a binder purchased during freshman orientation in 1947. Every one of Barth’s books has been written in this binder, with (since 1964) the same Parker pen.</p>
<p>“That’s the kind of anal-retentive I am,” he notes. “But it’s a happy routine.”</p>
<p>Barth wrote aspects of living in both Chestertown and Bonita Springs into the new book, which is his wittiest and most accessible work in years. <em>The Development</em> takes place in a gated community, not unlike where the Barths live in Florida, but it’s set on the Shore. Both the real Bonita Springs and Barth’s imagined Heron Bay Estates include a mix of condos, duplexes, coach homes, and detached houses. Both are beautifully maintained and handsomely landscaped. Both are prone to intense storms. Both are populated mostly by wealthy conservatives, with a few stock liberals in the mix. You might guess who the real life liberals are.</p>
<p>“When Shelly and I bought the house, we had properly mixed feelings about the whole gated community thing,” says Barth. “It’s that whole us and them thing.”  (A story in <em>The Development</em>, “Us/Them,” deals with the same issue.)</p>
<p>The book also includes “a failed old fart fictionist” named George Newett. With the middle initial “I” who turns out to be the writer of these stories. “By George I. Newett” would be his byline. You can practically hear Whitey chuckling at that one.</p>
<p>As always, it’s dedicated to Shelly. In fact, all of Barth’s books have been dedicated to her since 1970, the year they married. “She is my editor of first resort, my best friend, and my severest critic,” says Barth. She’s also a former student. They met when Shelly was a Penn State undergrad and reconnected a few years later at a reading in Boston. Shelly declined to be interviewed for this story, but Barth doesn’t shy from talking about her. He lauds her as an educator, now retired from teaching English at St. Timothy’s prep school in Baltimore County.</p>
<blockquote>
<h4>Every one of Barth’s books has been written in the same binder, with (since 1964) the same Parker pen. “That’s the kind of anal-retentive I am.”</h4>
</blockquote>
<p>He exudes not only a genuine love and respect, but also a profound sense of gratitude. And considering the fate of some of his peers, he feels especially fortunate. He recalls a gathering in New York City that also included Donald Barthelme, John Hawkes, and Kurt Vonnegut.</p>
<p>“I remember looking around at the group, and Donald whispered to me that it seemed a terminal sadness had come upon Vonnegut,” says Barth. “This was quite awhile ago, 15 or 20 years before his death. And I’ve seen it come over others, since then.” He pauses a moment, before getting to the real point of this story: “Even though there’s a fair amount of autumnality in my fiction these days, I don’t<br />
feel like that so much—in part, because my physical health is good. But it’s largely because my personal and domestic life has been a real source of bliss, support, and satisfaction.”</p>
<p>So when Barth goes to his writing room, it isn’t as some tormented genius full of postmodern angst. Rather, it’s as a happily married man with a story to tell, a story he’ll no doubt infuse with structural twists and turns of phrase, and, ultimately, dedicate to his wife. That’s the way it’s been, for nearly 40 years.</p>
<p>He has no intention of it changing any time soon.</p>
<p>In fact, he’s written 100 pages of what may turn out to be his next novel. “I’m cheered by the fact that there are plenty of cases where writers did some of their best work very late in the day,” he says. “I used to remind my writing students to, as they get older, keep in mind that Sophocles, as legend has it, wrote Oedipus at Colonus when he was 90.”</p>
<p>He leans forward: “Jack Hawkes used to tell me 30 years ago, ‘I can’t help feeling that I’ve reached my peak.’ “And I’d tell him, ‘Jack, I intend to reach my peak at about age 80.’”</p>
<p>He flashes a smile and lowers his voice: “Then, I’ll go into a very slow decline.</p>

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		<title>Into Thin Air</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/sciencetechnology/birds-disappearing-across-maryland/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Angeline Leong]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2020 11:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
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  <h4 class="deck">Birds are disappearing across Maryland—and North America. But citizens and scientists on the ground offer room for hope.
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  <p class="byline">By Lydia Woolever | Photography by Justin Tsucalas</p>
  
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  <p class="intro"><span class="uppers" style="font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>ust before dawn</strong></span> on one of the last days of winter, the houses are still dark and the roads mostly empty as the first peach light begins to break along the horizon of Maryland’s Eastern Shore. In fact, the moon seems to be the only one out here, riding high above switchgrass fields and silhouette tree lines. That is until you reach the end of a long dirt lane and step outside of your car to listen. The sound comes from every angle and consumes the senses—trills and tweets, warbles and whistles—the invisible chorus of birdsong, rising with the morning sun.</p>
  
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  <p>Before long, there is also the crunch of muck boots on fallen leaves as Jim Gruber trudges uphill from behind the old Foreman’s Branch field office, a half-dozen bulging mesh bags dangling from his hips. He heads inside into a small square room, walls covered in curling maps and stacked ceiling high with faded guidebooks, then hangs each fluttering specimen like an ornament from the exposed rafters.</p>
  
  <p>Gruber, director of this Washington College operation in rural Chestertown, along with resident field ecologist Maren Gimpel and their three students interns, are soon seated at a long table, reaching their hands into the bags and gently pulling out live birds—cardinals, sparrows, a tufted titmouse—all surprisingly calm, nestled between their middle and forefingers. Under the glow of desk lamps, they fasten a tiny metal band stamped with nine digits to each of the birds’ even tinier ankles, determine age and sex, and measure wing length and weight before opening a small windowpane and releasing them back into the open air.</p>
  
  <p>Fear not, they fly off, completely unphased by this alien abduction.</p>
  
  <p>“This is a white-throated sparrow,” says Gimpel, holding a brownish bird with a yellow forehead. “They’re only here in winter, and their song is a really nice clear whistle: ‘Old-sam, pea-body, pea-body, pea-body,’” and off it goes.</p>
  
  <p>At least once an hour, the team treks out across this sprawling countryside, through the woods and along the field edges, toward a labyrinth of some 90 nylon nets that catch these birds in their loose pockets. From March through May, they’ll band everything from hawks to hummingbirds, then return again come autumn, marking some 15,000 birds a year. At the end of the season, their records will be reported to the federal government and stored for science, much as they have been since the observatory began in the late 1990s.</p> 
  
  <p>But over those years, there have also been changes.</p> 
  
  <p>“Myrtle warblers are way down, whip-poor-wills are gone,” says Gruber, running down a mental list. “You used to go out in the summer evenings and hear them calling near Tolchester Beach.”</p> 
  
  <p>“We’ve all inevitably heard an older birder say, ‘In my day, there used to be…,’” adds Gimpel.  “Those stories sound crazy to us now.” </p>
  
  <p>For this crew, the disappearances are concerning, but the importance of their work is not about yesterday, or tomorrow, when they’ll do it all over again. They want to know, like many others: What will things look like in the next 100 years, or 50, or 20?</p><p>
And they're not the only ones who want to know.</p>
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  “This is a white-throated sparrow. They’re only here in winter, and their song is a really nice clear whistle: ‘Old-sam, pea-body, pea-body, pea-body.’”
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  <p><span style="letter-spacing: 2px; font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>It’s not every day</strong></span> that ornithology makes national headlines, but last fall, the prestigious academic journal <i>Science</i> released a report that sent shockwaves throughout the birding community, and beyond. In the last 50 years, it said, North American bird populations have plummeted by nearly 30 percent, with a staggering 2.9 billion birds lost since 1970.</p>
  
  <p>“Bye-bye, birdie,” wrote <em>Reuters</em>. “The skies are emptying out,” said <em>The New York Times</em>.</p>
  
  <p>While experts have long known that certain birds were diminishing, this ambitious study, led by researchers from a panoply of universities, government agencies, and nonprofits, revealed widespread loss. Across 529 species, a few populations improved, but the majority declined, often sharply.</p>
  
  <p>“It’s not just these highly threatened birds,” said lead author Kenneth V. Rosenberg of Cornell University to the <i>Times</i>. “It’s across the board,” including traditionally abundant common birds like robins, cardinals, and blackbirds. A quarter of all blue jays and almost half of all Baltimore orioles have vanished.</p>
  
  <p>And these losses likely have ominous implications beyond just bird populations—the proverbial canary in the coal mine. “Birds are a really important ecological link: they disperse seeds, they control insects, they can act as pollinators,” says David Curson, conservation director at the National Audubon Society’s Maryland-D.C. chapter. “Because they’re so visible and audible, making them easy to count compared to other animals, they’re important indicators of the wellbeing of our natural ecosystems.”</p>
  
  <p>“If you take away one species, you might not notice the difference,” adds Gabriel Foley, coordinator for the region’s Breeding Bird Atlas survey, a five-year collaboration between the Department of Natural Resources, the Maryland Ornithological Society, the Maryland Bird Conservation Partnership, and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to study local populations. “But as you remove more and more, things start to fall apart, like a Jenga tower. Something somewhere is wrong if you see massive declines like a third of your overall bird population gone over just a few decades.”</p>
  
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  <p><span style="letter-spacing: 2px; font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>Much of what was</strong></span> reported in the <i>Science</i> paper would not have been possible without the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, located just down I-95 in Laurel and run by the U.S. Geological Survey on the same Fish & Wildlife Service refuge where famed conservationist Rachel Carson worked before writing her prophetic <em>Silent Spring</em>.</p>
  
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  <p>Here, Keith Pardieck now oversees the North American Breeding Bird Survey, which provided a bulk of the report’s data. One of the primary ways we understand the populations and trends of this continent’s birds, the survey takes place each breeding season, mostly throughout the month of June, when hordes of skilled birders set out on some 3,000 routes, including 54 in Maryland, each comprised of 50 roadside stops with rigorous protocols for counting every bird they see or hear. The data is then analyzed by the likes of veteran biologist John Sauer, who co-authored the <i>Science</i> piece, and released to the public, with records dating back to its inception in the 1960s. </p>
  
  <p>“We can tell which direction the populations are going: are they increasing, are they decreasing?” says Pardieck. “It serves as any early warning system.”</p>
  
  <p>And until last year, “We knew that populations were trending downward, but we didn’t have a scientifically defensible way to identify actual numbers,” says John French, Patuxent’s director. “And the numbers were big. They were rather shocking. These are significant declines.”</p>
  
  <p>But where are the birds going? And why? The answers, in many ways, come down to us. </p>
  
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  <p><span style="letter-spacing: 2px; font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>While Maryland’s</strong></span> natural diversity is one of the small state’s greatest strengths, from the dense woods of the Appalachian Mountains to the sandy shores of the Atlantic Coast, its human population has more than doubled since 1950, leading to habitat loss and fragmentation throughout wetlands, grasslands, and forest. Between 2010 and 2017 alone, Anne Arundel County lost nearly 3,000 acres of trees.</p>
  
  <p>“People have to live somewhere,” says the Atlas’ Foley. “But for every development that goes in, there’s now another woodlot or meadow that’s been lost, and you don’t really get those back.”</p>
  
  <p>For that, the Audubon Society has designated 43 “Important Bird Areas” across the state, or more than one million acres of essential habitat, including the grounds of Foreman’s Branch, as well as the Patapsco Valley and Prettyboy Reservoir in Baltimore County. But cities also play a vital role. </p>
  
  <p>“Baltimore is an important stopover for migratory birds,” says Audubon’s Curson. “They can seek shelter and refuel at places like Patterson Park, where sometimes in early May, it can sound just like the Canadian forest.”</p>
  
  <p>At the same time, urban areas can also look like ornithological crime scenes. “Four months out of the year, we walk about 25 buildings downtown and find at least 300 dead birds,” says Lindsey Jacks of Lights Out Baltimore, a nonprofit aimed at promoting bird-safe buildings, with collisions being a leading cause of avian mortality after outdoor cats (which, yes, really, account for as many as 3.7 billion annual deaths nationwide). “If you think about the rest of the city, then multiply that by the rest of Maryland, you can start to see how a billion birds are impacted in the U.S. alone each year.” </p>
  
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  <p>Homes and low-rise buildings are the biggest offenders, she says, particularly those with windows across from greenspaces, as birds primarily collide with the reflected tree line. Injured birds are taken to the county’s Phoenix Wildlife Center for rehabilitation, while the dead ones go to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History collections or Johns Hopkins University’s School of Medicine for cancer and aging research. Lights Out also works with local businesses, like the National Aquarium, to mitigate exteriors with films and netting, or to turn lights off at night during periods of migration, so as to not confuse birds that navigate by starlight. Though statewide legislation to mandate bird-friendly government buildings stalled in the General Assembly this spring, it seems likely to pass next year.</p>
  
  <p>But even out in the country, trouble remains, as modern agriculture and its intensive farming practices have greatly reduced hedgerow habitat for species like bobwhite quail, while also increasing pesticide use, which diminishes their food source, and worse.</p>
  
  <p>“Remember years ago, when you’d drive down a country road at night and have bug splatter all over your windshield,” poses Robin Todd, head of the Maryland Ornithological Society, which maintains 2,264 acres of wildlife sanctuaries across the state. Insect populations are on the downturn, too, and as a result, “Aerial insectivores—swallows, swifts, nightjars, flycatchers, who catch food on the wing—are suffering real declines.”</p>
  
  <p>“Common nighthawks used to fly around in the floodlights at sports arenas like Camden Yards, but it’s really unusual to see them now,” says Audubon’s Curson. “I think they’re telling us something.”</p>
  
  <p>In mid-March, Maryland banned chlorpyrifos, a pesticide linked to developmental issues in children, as well as the likes of disorientation and death in birds, though Governor Hogan ultimately vetoed the measure. Last summer, the Environmental Protection Agency also backed out of its nationwide ban, seen by many as a victory for chemical companies.</p>
  
  <p>And while 12 neonicotinoid-containing products were prohibited by the EPA last spring, dozens remain on the market, in everything from sprays to seed coatings, that also harm beneficial insects like bees, while impairing the cognitive abilities and appetites of birds.</p>
  
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  <p>Looking toward the future, though, it seems the most imminent threat might be that of climate change. Two-thirds of North American bird species are at increasing risk of extinction from global warming this century if current trends continue, according to a new Audubon study using data from Patuxent’s BBS and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, among others.</p>
  
  <p>Extreme weather events, such as heat waves and the heavy rains that historically ravaged Ellicott City, could threaten their ecological balance. With rising temperatures, millions of birds are now migrating earlier, and “we’re concerned that delicate timing could be thrown out of kilter,” says Todd, noting the important synchronization of migration and nesting timelines with those of insect hatches. </p>
  
  <p>Experts expect that many creatures, from butterflies to fish and particularly birds, will also shift their ranges northward. “We’ve been seeing this already,” says Patuxent’s French. “But whether they expand northward, or contract from the south, and if their current conditions are actually found elsewhere, that still needs to be explored.” </p><p>Other birds will be there, too, of course, fighting for the same food and habitat. </p>
  
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  <p>Forest and coastal birds are most at risk in Maryland, according to the Audubon study, though many species are still vulnerable, including the Baltimore oriole. Local numbers remain largely consistent, but nearly 20 percent of their range could be lost during worst-case temperature increases. Meanwhile, the American woodcock and red-headed woodpecker would lose nearly all of their regional ground, while common birds, like house wrens and goldfinches, could be pushed entirely out of the state.</p>
  
  <p>“It’s a call to action,” says Curson, noting the study’s findings that lower temperature increases will endanger far fewer birds.</p>
  
  <p>His team is prioritizing the state’s tidal marshes and coastal bays in Dorchester and Worcester counties, which are highly vulnerable to sea-level rise. “Climate change poses an existential threat to these ecosystems and the birds that live in them,” he says, pointing to specialist species like the saltmarsh sparrow, which nests on the very edge of that sinking shoreline. With the Fish & Wildlife Service, they’re looking at ways to save the low-lying landscape, such as rebuilding parts of the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge with native grasses and sediment dredged from the bay’s shipping channels, all in order to save the birds.</p>
  
  <p>“You have to remain an optimist,” says Curson. </p>
  
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  <div align="center"><h2>THE GREAT DISAPPEARANCE OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS</h2>
  <p class="clan captionVideo"><img decoding="async" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/Artboard-5-100_200508_162524.jpg" style="max-width: 18px;">  A survey of 529 bird species in the United States and Canada found that bird populations have fallen by 29 percent since 1970, a loss of nearly three billion birds.</p>
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  <span style="letter-spacing: 2px; font-family: 'ff-clan-web','Helvetica Neue','Helvetica',Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif; letter-spacing: 2px;"><strong>After all,</strong></span> there is room for hope, with two of the nation’s most iconic success stories located right here on the Chesapeake.</p>
  
  <p>At Patuxent’s Bird Banding Laboratory, circa 1920, biologist Jennifer Malpass and her colleagues keep all the bands that go out to the country’s 7,550 permitted banders, like Gruber and Gimpel, who altogether mark more than one million new birds each year, as approved by the Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The world’s largest repository of banded bird data, they have more than 77 million banding records, stretching back nearly 100 years, and over five million encounter records, aka follow-up sightings from enthusiasts who capture the nine-digit codes in their binoculars or camera lenses, as well as from hunters who legally harvest waterfowl.</p>
  
  <p>In these parts, it might sound contradictory, but waterfowl, such as ducks and Canada geese, are one of the few bird groups on the upswing, due in large part to the historic relationship between the BBL and the hunting community, which reports tens of thousands of encounters each winter, which then inform state and federal regulations, from harvest limits to hunting-season length. Hunters also pay annual fees, which contribute to habitat conservation. Nearly six million acres have been saved so far.</p>
  
  <p>Raptors, too—bald eagles, ospreys, peregrine falcons—have dramatically rebounded since the 1970s, thanks to the ban of DDT, a once commonly used pesticide that pushed these birds of prey to the brink of extinction. Compared to 44 some 40 years ago, there are now at least 1,200 breeding pairs of our national bird throughout the state, with 200 or so nests monitored by volunteers of the Maryland Bird Conservation Partnership, which is also starting a similar program for barn owls and American kestrels.</p>
  
  <p>“We may call them ‘our birds,’ but the reality is many other people across the country and world consider them their birds, too,” says the BBL’s Malpass. “It takes a whole village, and only by working together can we make a difference.”</p>
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  <div class="medium-8 push-2 columns" style="padding-top:1rem; padding-bottom:2rem;"><p>And over the next five years, Maryland will be home to a prime example of such community teamwork and citizen science with the Breeding Bird Atlas, the third-ever to be completed in Maryland and D.C. “It gives us a snapshot of how local populations are doing, and in quite good detail,” says Foley. </p>
  
  <p>Like the BBS, present and past Atlases, like those completed in the 1980s and early 2000s, will inform the future, with the current iteration running through 2024, paying particular attention to the state’s 87 rare, threatened, or endangered species. But unlike the BBS, the Atlas is open to every skill level, and taking place across the entire state. “If you find a robin nesting in your backyard, you can report that,” says Foley, with observations submitted via Cornell’s eBird app or website. He expects more than 1,000 participants, seeing it as an easy way to get more young people involved in birding.</p>
  
  <p>In 2020, the average birder is a white woman, aged 53 or older, with an above-average income. “Diversity is limited in bird-watching, but it’s certainly growing,” says Foley, citing newer groups such as the Feminist Bird Club and the Queer Birders of North America. 
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  “WE MAY CALL THEM ‘OUR BIRDS,’ BUT THE REALITY IS MANY OTHER PEOPLE ACROSS THE COUNTRY AND WORLD THINK OF THEM AS THEIR BIRDS, TOO. IT TAKES A WHOLE VILLAGE.”
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  <p>And from a small yellow brick rowhome on the edge of Highlandtown, the Patterson Park Audubon Center has been working toward that sort of inclusivity for decades.</p>
  
  <p>“We want the future of conservation to look like Baltimore and we need to listen to these young people’s perspectives,” says center director Susie Creamer, who has helped create a green pipeline of sorts for the neighborhood’s large African-American and Hispanic communities, from pre-K nature programs through high-school camp counselor positions.</p> 
  
  <p>Their <I>Embajadores de Aves</I>, or Bird Ambassadors program, also teaches environmental education to Spanish-speaking adults who then implement local action plans, like street cleanups and habitat plantings, with many finding the a-ha moment in connecting the migrations of birds and people. “Both are traveling incredible distances and enduring many challenges to come to the U.S. and find a safe place to raise their families,” says Creamer.</p>
  
  <p>The center hosts year-round community nature walks and native garden design workshops, too, even offering a special certifications for local residents and businesses who prioritize planting native plants throughout the city. Those species in particular have evolved complex relationships with birds up-and-down the food chain and through pollination over the centuries. </p> 

<p>And by expanding and connecting these pockets of urban greenspace, the ultimate goal is to turn the city into a sort of oasis for birds—and Baltimoreans. </p>
  
  <p> “It’s really for all of us,” says Creamer. “If the birds thrive, so do we.”</p>

<p><I>Editor’s Note: After publication, Maryland legislators banned the use of chlorpyrifos in 2021, the same year that the pesticide was banned by the EPA.</I></p>
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