Anyways, while I was in California, I learned how to prep a bird study skin. I’ve always liked birds, but I got really into birdwatching out there. Corvids are my favorite. There’s been a lot written about how unbelievably smart crows, ravens, magpies (the best corvid!), and their relatives are. I could (and occasionally do) go on about how beautiful and brilliant these creatures are, but this is actually a post about taxidermy. Sort of. For your further edification, have a short video about New Caledonian Crows, which are smarter than your average human toddler. They make tools. They have a head the size of a walnut and they make tools. They don’t just use sticks to pull bugs out of holes, they will actively shape them and incorporate new materials.
When you’re done with that, here’s a video of a magpie irritating a significantly larger predator and then stealing its food. Skip to 3:38 for the good stuff, other than that it's just a fox peeing on things.
Oh. Another thing I wanted to do, Your Friend the Turkey Vulture. Note to self, write that.
Anyways, corvids. Wait, no, this is a post about taxidermy.
This is Sam Black Crow.
This bird was roughly two years old when he died of what was most likely poison. We don’t actually know what killed him, but it wasn’t a predator or any injury. He was found in a baseball field. I made a study skin out of him.
A study skin is different than a taxidermy mount because a study skin is designed to make all of the external parts of a bird visible. This is really important for species that look a lot like other species. Many warblers and finches resemble each other, as do many of the thrushes. With a crow, it’s pretty easy to tell that it’s a crow- even in areas where crows and ravens overlap. Here in Chicago, the rule of thumb is that if you see a black corvid, it’s an American Crow or a Black-Billed Magpie. Magpies aren’t supposed to live in Chicago- it’s not part of their natural range- but they are extremely well-established in both Millennium and Grant Parks, and I’ve seen some in Lincoln Park, too. I’ve also seen some on Museum Campus, but that’s mostly ACRO territory. There may or may not be ravens- they used to live here extensively, but now not so much. Ravens really got pushed out of the Midwest. We also get fish crows occasionally, but if you’re familiar with ACROs, it’s not too tough to tell them apart. Blue Jays are also up here, but if you can’t tell the difference between a crow and an adult Blue Jay, you have a larger problem than I am capable of addressing.
There were a lot of birds to choose from initially- a woodpecker, a… Swainson’s hawk, I think… a California quail, several different songbirds, and two really large American Crows. I wanted one of the crows because corvids are my favorite birds. There’s a lot of mythology surrounding corvids- generally they’re tricksters, spirits of discord- but never out of spite or malice. Chaos for amusement’s sake is part of the mythological corvid’s nature, but they’re good at heart- in Inuit mythology, Crow or Raven (depends on your translation, but given the area it makes way more geographical sense to be Raven) gave humanity the sun and created the first woman (because the creator spirit lacks originality, apparently), but is also responsible for nearly starving humanity more than once, is an incorrigible kleptomaniac, and may or may not be the catalyst for the end of the world, whenever that is. If you know me at all it shouldn’t be too hard to tell why I like these birds so much. Fortunately, there were few enough people interested in cutting open a crow that nobody contested my claim to this handsome gentleman.
Look at that wing. Magnificent. |
No actual pictures of me dissecting his body cavity. That would have been kinda messy. |
No pictures of internal organs. Promise. Look how fluffy he is! I think it would be lovely to hold a live crow, given how lovely they are to hold post-mortem. |
The skull is left in the body and you use the hole you used to remove the brain. In taxidermy, you replace the bird’s eyeballs with glass eyes, but you don’t do that for a study skin. Instead, you stuff the eye sockets with cotton.
It’s pretty much the last thing you do. You then put the skin someplace to dry and you sort of pin the body into position so the wings don’t splay out or do anything funny.
Ventral perspective go! |
Then you tie on a tag with all the pertinent specimen information and the name of the person who prepped the skin and you let it dry so that this excellent bird can educate people for years to come. How many years? Well, at the Field, we still have study skins from the expeditions in the 1890s. That’s a lot of people who can potentially learn from one individual animal!