Five stars! Sophie Osborn is a total boss.
I heard Osborn speak about her work last year at a Chicago Ornithological Society Zoom meeting and have been meaning to read her book. I ended up listening to the audiobook.
I loved hearing Osborn's story of her work on endangered bird captive breeding and release projects: peregrine falcon, Hawaiian crow, and California condor. She did a great job describing the birds, their individual stories, and the many threats they face: DDT, pathogens from mosquitos, lead bullets, trash, house cats and other invasive predators, climate change, etc. Her work sounds really challenging, sometimes rewarding and often heartbreaking. What humans have done and are still doing to our planet and its life makes me so upset--a third of all birds lost in less than a century.
Just when I didn't think I could hate the NRA more, I learned they fought to keep lead bullets legal for hunters despite 600+ peer reviewed scientific reports about the danger of these bullets on the environment, especially for scavengers like condors. It was a great idea for conservationists to provide safe bullet alternatives for hunters as a free trade in, but Osborn points out that even if 2 percent of hunters continue to use lead bullets, the condor population would still go extinct without monitoring and interventions like catching the birds with signs of lead poisoning and flushing their systems. Glad that by 2019 at least California had banned lead hunting ammunition.
Osborn is a hero. Such important work.
Finished 4.12.25