Nixon is the warden for Great Inagua National Park in the Bahamas. The park is about the size of Austin, Texas, and covers more than half of the island of Great Inagua. Nixon oversees at least 60,000 flamingos, along with dozens of other bird species, including roseate spoonbills, great egrets, snowy egrets, and great blue herons. But the flamingos are the stars. And they have come a long way.
For hundreds of years, flamingos were hunted across South America, the Caribbean, and Florida for their meat and their iconic pink feathers. The feathers were mostly used for hats and other accessories. By the 1950s, the region’s flamingos were almost extinct.