A biology professor at UTRGV says misidentification and location have stacked the odds against the Couch's Kingbird. The bird, native to the Rio Grande Valley, is now the least popular bird in this country – a less-than-honorary standing established by a paper published recently in the Proceedings in the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. “It's a medium-sized bird that perches in the trees or on telephone wires,” according to Dr. Timothy Brush, the UTRGV biology professor. “It's got some yellow underneath. It has gray and olive up above. It’s got a broad bill, because it catches insects. So, it flies out to catch insects out of mid-air and has very good vision evidently.” When it comes to popularity, though, the Couch's Kingbird has two big disadvantages. One is that you might not even know you’re seeing it. “It used to be thought it was the same as another species, the Tropical Kingbird, which looks identical,” Brush said. “And until people studied the details of the calls and measurements, they didn't realize it’s actually a different species.”
The second strike against it is its location. “It’s a bird that only birdwatchers probably know about, because it’s one of the specialty birds that they have to come to the Valley to see,” Brush said. “So, if they’re planning a trip, then they would say, ‘OK, I’m going to look up some of the birds.’ “But if they live in New Jersey or Iowa and they’re just birding there, they have no reason to even hear about the Couch’s Kingbird.” Given those two factors, this member of the Tyrant Flycatcher family wasn’t going to rank high in popularity. The authors who calculated the bird popularity rankings used Google Trends, which summarizes online searches, and encounter rates tracked on the eBird database. The popularity value calculated for the most popular bird, the wild turkey, was 3.23. The Couch's Kingbird was valued at -1.67. The authors of the paper say one of the benefits of bird popularity is conservation advocacy. Brush added a few more reasons for us to be concerned about birds. “Birds are indicators of environmental health,” he said. “If the birds are doing well, it’s a sign the ecosystem is doing well. “Also, they’re very beautiful, so they attract a lot of attention. You can sometimes help preserve areas, because there are snazzy birds there,” he said. If you’d like to help the Couch’s Kingbird out of its popularity slump – or keep any bird found in the Rio Grande Valley out of those negative numbers – just take some time to appreciate our many feathered friends in the area. “There’s about 30 species that you can see most easily here and that you likely won’t see too many other places, if at all,” Brush said. “Couch’s Kingbird is just one species among many that are beautiful to see.” For anyone interested in learning more about birds, the UTRGV Biology Department offers ornithology courses. You can get more information at https://www.utrgv.edu/biology/index.htm.