Perhaps some other time I’ll write in more detail about the links between Minnesota’s Bell Museum and birds. There are many. Now I’ll just note that the Bell Museum was closed for a long time during a move to a new location; the Bell had its grand opening last Sunday; I took some pictures to demonstrate the Bell-Bird link and here they are. Some of them.

Let’s start with the Loon. This is one of the Bell’s famous dioramas (more below). Most museums when they move trash the dioramas. Not the Bell. The Bell incorporated the dioramas, or at least many of them, into a fantastic floor of natural history museumology. The Loon diorama demonstrates biparental care in a bird.

Bell Museum diorama with loons.

Sometimes the birds are used as a prop in a mammal exhibit. Can you find the bird that is about to be eaten by the Lynx?

Hungry Lynx will eat bird

The Bell has encouraged and developed a great deal of nature art, and much of that is bird art.

Bird art at the Bell.

Cranes are a bid deal in Minnesota, and they are a big deal at the Bell.

Cranes

Just around this point I was getting a little tired, having had a long drive that morning, and skipped lunch. Then things got even worse. In fact, it was a turn for the worse….

Gulls

The Bell museum is old. How old is it? So old that this exhibit originally used live passenger pigeons!

But seriously. This is the Swallow Tailed Kite, a Mississippi river valley dwelling Kite which used to live all up and down the Mississippi, even way up to the source at Itasca. But not any more. The Bell has always offered the same exact explanation for the Kite’s range getting so small, and I never quite believed it. Anybody out there know why this Kite has abandoned most of the Mississippi?

The Mississippi Kite

The Bell collection of birds is impressive. Here are a bunch of the blue birds.

Collection of Blue Birds.

This is what it looks like when you run out of exhibit space but have not run out of birds.

Crowded exhibit case

Written by Greg
Greg Laden has been watching birds since they were still dinosaurs, but has remained the consummate amateur. This is probably because he needs better binoculars. Based in the Twin Cities, Minnesota, Greg is a biological anthropologist and Africanist, who writes and teaches about Evolution, especially of humans. He also blogs at Scienceblogs.com. Greg's beat is Bird Evolutionary Biology. One could say that knowing the science of birds can make the birds more interesting. But really, knowing about the birds that go with the science is more likely to make the science more interesting. And thus, birding and Neo Darwinian Theory go hand in hand. Darwin was, after all, a pretty serious birder. Greg has seen a bird eat a monkey in the wild.