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His detective work included once trying to decipher how many pieces of chicken were in a meal that may have been eaten by a suspect in one of the Chicago area's most notorious murders
-- the slaying of seven people inside a restaurant. His comparison of the leftovers found in the garbage with chicken bones in Field's collection was inconclusive
-- though Willard still testified at the 2007 trial of suspect Juan Luna, who was later convicted. Requests for Field detective services have tapered off over the past decade, in part because federal wildlife and other labs have taken up much of the slack. The Smithsonian's four-employee feather lab is busier than ever, though, as the number of bird-plane collisions has soared. Pilots have reported hitting more than 59,700 birds since 2000, most often mourning doves, gulls, European starlings and American kestrels. Every week, dozens of bird carcasses, parts or merely gooey remnants arrive by mail after they've been scraped off damaged airplane engines. The US Airways strike involved birds that weighed an average of 8 pounds, and it took Dove and her team months to sift through 69 bags of remains. Bird-strike cases processed by the unit jumped to more than 4,500 in 2008 from around 300 in 1989, Dove said. The lab has a success rate of more than 90 percent in identifying birds, solving many cases in just hours using a database of bird DNA. But without the Field's goose collection, pinpointing the precise type of Canada geese could have taken longer, Dove said. She said the US Airways case shows that bird collections, many compiled over more than a century, aren't just academic indulgences. "Sometimes people on the street don't see how this work can be applied to their lives," she said. "Here, we can see these collections can be used for an immediate improvement in public safety. That's incredible." ___ On the Net: Field Museum: http://www.fieldmuseum.org/ Smithsonian: http://www.mnh.si.edu/
[Associated
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