The Bonin grosbeak was discovered by the
Beechey Pacific expedition, which collected two specimens on Chichi-jima in 1827. The following year, Kittlitz took several more specimens, but he only gave the locality "Boninsima" (="Bonin-shima": Ogasawara Islands). Following the report of two shipwrecked sailors, picked up by Beechey, that the island would make a good stopover station for
whalers, settlement was begun in 1830. When the
Rodgers-
Ringgold North Pacific Exploring and Surveying Expedition called at Chichi-jima in 1854, naturalist
William Stimpson could not find the birds. What he did find, however, were rats and feral goats, sheep, dogs and cats, in addition to the pigs that were already present in 1828 (and which might have been left there by Beechey to provision future castaways). Just like the
Bonin thrush, the Bonin grosbeak probably succumbed soon after 1830 to habitat destruction and predation by the introduced mammals. The collector A.P.Holst in 1889 was told by locals that the species persisted on islands of the Haha-jima group (though Holst could not find any on Haha-jima itself, nor on Chichi-jima for the matter). However, given that the species was not reported from there neither during the 1853 visit of the first
Perry mission to
Japan nor in 1854, this seems either erroneous or a misunderstanding for some island in the Chichi-jima group. The sedentary habits of the Bonin grosbeak make it unlikely that it was present anywhere outside the
Chichijima Rettō. ==References==