Staying Power
We know the last stuffed specimen of the dodo burned
              in 1755, though Wikipedia's "Dodo: Talk" page shows
 sources conflict on whether the fire was an accident
 or intentional. They say it had started to smell. The bird
              meant little then but now enjoys a certain fame, as if
 its absence caused the idea of the thing to grow. This week,
 well-funded researchers are seeking what's left in the way
              of concrete data—combining multiple skeletons to make
 3D computer models. Previously unstudied bones of the dodo:
 its kneecaps. We study most fervently what's gone, and then
              what's going, like the emperor penguin. In Antarctica,
 an investigative rover camouflaged as a chick mingles
 with the flocks of black and white squawking on the ice, keeping tabs
              so scientists can keep their distance. The rover was created
 because penguins exhibit such high levels of agitation
 from human contact. Unfortunately, drawing blood still requires
              intervention, necessary because the more their habitat disappears,
 the more actively we search for sudden changes in numbers, behavior—
 We' re determined to get this loss down right, not like that fool bird
              of Mauritius. Sorry, the Internet tells me that's a false
 etymology from the Portuguese duodo meaning crazy or
 foolish but it was actually the Dutch who sailed there, naming
              the land after their prince and the bird dodoor for sluggard, or
 was it dodaars for the tuft of feathers perched on its rear? Is it nothing
 but a linguistic misstep that enthralls us? Linneaus
              adding the already extinct bird to his elaborate network
 in 1766—Didus ineptus, inept dodo. Now a decade ago,
 Wikipedia contributor Wetman asked, was th[is] the first genus
              and species given to an extinct animal? (No responses yet.)
 Judging by its name alone, we can't help but question what
 combination of natural forces bequeathed the earth this ill-formed
              creature. I wonder further if we've given the flightless birds
 of the arctic royal titles to make up for past wrongs—king penguin
 and the larger emperor, but Wikipedia suggests no source for these names,
              so I have to ask in the talk page. As for the dodo,
 confusion persists over capitalization—blame Linneaus again—
 Is dodo the common name or specific? Poor Paul writes, I was fixing
              every single mention of the bird in the article when suddenly
 I lost the courage of my convictions. No desperation like that
 of a Wiki contributor, alone among many, awaiting
              response. Even what's long gone refuses to hold still, refuses
 to stabilize for the purposes of recording.
Copyright Credit: Katie Willingham, "Staying Power" from Unlikely Designs.  Copyright © 2017 by Katie Willingham.  Reprinted by permission of The University of Chicago Press.
Source: Unlikely Designs (The University of Chicago Press, 2017)


