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Dove bred for release at an event From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A release dove is usually a small white domestic rock dove used for events such as public ceremonies, weddings and funerals. They typically have a symbolic meaning for the event.
Typically one or more white doves are released. Sometimes doves are called pigeons, there is no distinction.[1] Usually domestic rock doves (Columba livia domestica) bred for small size and white coloration are released due to their homing ability.[2][3][4]
Barbary doves (Streptopelia risoria), also known as ringneck doves, carry a mutation that makes them completely white. These white Barbary doves are most commonly used in stage magic acts. White Barbary doves are sometimes released in large public ceremonies as a peace symbol, and at weddings and funerals. However, releases usually use homing pigeons, as Barbary doves lack the homing instinct and will die if released into the wild.
Albinism or other genetic anomalies that produce an entirely white dove occur very rarely in the wild since an all-white coloration would make these birds stand out in their natural habitats, leaving them highly vulnerable to predators.[5]
Pigeon breeds used for dove release services are chosen for their color and small size, not for their homing abilities or flight speed. Although dove release businesses advertise that their birds will be able to safely return home, released doves are frequently killed in accidents or by predators before they can return home.[6] Trained white homing pigeons, domesticated forms of the rock dove, stand a better chance of returning home if vigorously trained prior to release by a trainer and within a distance of 600 miles from the loft. Ringneck doves that are released into the wild and survive will likely starve to death.[7]
Increased public awareness about animal cruelty, and the influx of injured or lost release doves in animal shelters is decreasing the demand for release dove services.[6]
In The Epic of Gilgamesh, an epic poem from ancient Mesopotamia, a flood narrative is present, where the character Utnapishtim sends out a dove in the hope it will find land. However, the dove returns to his ship and he assumes it did not find land.
The release of doves is associated with the Genesis flood narrative; where a dove is sent out three times as the flood waters are receding.[8]
The ritual of releasing doves in the Olympic games originated in 1896.[9] The doves in the 1896 Olympics were released as part of the closing ceremony; the ritual became an official part of the opening ceremony in the 1920 Antwerp games. The ritual was altered to be purely symbolic after several of the doves released in the 1988 Seoul Olympics landed on the Olympic Torch and were burnt alive when it was lit.[10] At the Olympics 2021, in Tokyo, a thousand paper doves were used instead of real birds.[11]
In 2004, Pope John Paul II released doves, with children, to promote Christian unity and world peace.[12]
In 2005, Pope John Paul II started a yearly January tradition of children releasing doves from a window to promote world peace.[13][14] The practice was problematic due to the birds not flying away and returning to the window 2005,[13] 2012.[13] At some releases the doves were attacked by other birds, a seagull in 2013,[15][16] and a seagull and a crow in 2014.[17][14][18]
In December 2013, at an event where Pope Benedict XVI released doves during a Holocaust remembrance event the birds were attacked by a seagull.[19][20]
Since 2015, The Vatican no longer engages in the releasing doves due to the problems of birds not flying away and being attacked by other birds. The notoriety of this event generated a public outcry for the Vatican to halt this practice. A balloon release has been used instead in 2015[15] and 2018.[21]
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