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WHOOPING CRANE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP | |||||||
| WHOOPING CRANE REINTRODUCTION | ||||||||
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About WCEP | Hatching & Rearing Cranes | About the Ultralight-led Migration | Direct Autumn Release | |
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Whooping Crane Eastern PartnershipJuly 2010 Project Update
Population StatusAs of late July 2010 there are approximately 97 birds in the Eastern Migratory Population (EMP) of whooping cranes, consisting of 52 males, 43 females and two wild-hatched chicks (see below). Most birds are located across 7 counties in Wisconsin, with approximately 38 birds at Necedah National Wildlife Refuge. A single female is again spending the summer in Indiana, two males reported in North Dakota in late May have not been relocated, and one DAR male was last reported in April from Michigan. Five others have not been located since spring. Recent locations of EMP whooping cranes are shown in the map below.
Nesting StatusAt least nine breeding pairs of whooping cranes attempted nesting this year, with all nests except two located on Necedah National Wildlife Refuge. A total of seven chicks hatched in the nests of five pairs, and two chicks remain alive as of late July. The ages of these two chicks are now approximately 53 and 60 days.
Captive-reared CohortPreparations for the 2010 whooping crane releases of chicks hatched from captive cranes consist of two projects: ultralight training and direct autumn release (DAR). This year the ultralight cohort of whooping cranes consists of 13 birds training at two pen sites on the Necedah National Wildlife Refuge. The DAR cohort consists of 11 young whooping cranes being reared at one pen site on the Necedah National Wildlife Refuge.
Reporting SightingsPlease forward any sightings you receive to us through the whooping crane reporting web site we have established for that purpose: http://www.fws.gov/midwest/whoopingcrane/sightings/sightingform.cfm
The link above provides a public reporting form on a site maintained by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). When a report is submitted, the information goes simultaneously to multiple partners including the biologists who are tracking the birds, FWS, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, International Crane Foundation, and Operation Migration.
This update is a product of the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership. To access our previous project updates and additional information on the project visit our web site at http://www.bringbackthecranes.org/.
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Last updated:
September 1, 2010
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