268 BIRDS IN THEIR RELATIONS TO MAN. 



may neither be captured nor kept in captivity. Other States 

 •specify what birds may be caged. Whether birds are caged 

 or not, so long as they are not subject to traffic, is a matter 

 of no importance to birds in general. The few taken from 

 the Avild state usually prove good missionaries. People that 

 keep a tame bird a year or two are usually friendly to the 

 race thereafter. 



Although every State and the Territory of Alaska has its 

 bird law, there is a great lack of uniformity among the differ- 

 ent States, and many of the laws are very incomplete. Their 

 enforcement is usually left to State or county officials, gener- 

 ally to game wardens or commissioners. Offences that do 

 not come directly to their notice are rarely heard of, for the 

 reason that most persons, even though favorable to bird pro- 

 tection, dislike to report the misdeeds of their neighbors. 

 The utility of birds and the causes and extent of decrease 

 among them are so little understood by the general public 

 that there is no popular interest either in making or enforcing 

 laws for their preservation. So far as law-making is con- 

 cerned, it is easy as compared with the task of preventing 

 law-breaking; but even law-making — adequate law-making 

 — has proved uphill work. Protection should be uniform, 

 because most of our birds cover vast areas. Federal legisla- 

 tion prohibiting interstate traffic in wild bird plumage, and 

 the Migratory Bird Act, protecting migratory insectivorous 

 birds, like the Lacey Act, meet the requirements more 

 quickly and effectively than State laws. To meet the 

 need of uniformity, and at the same time to suggest a safe, 

 intelligent measure^ the Committee on Bird Protection of 

 the American Ornithologists' Union have prepared an act 

 which has already been adopted in its main features by 

 several States. At this time it appears probable that, 

 through the efforts of the ornithologists and others inter- 

 ested in protecting birds, this proposed act will ultimately be 

 the basis of protective laws throughout the Union. A copy 



