WHOOPING
CRANE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP
NEWS RELEASE
Third
Flock of Whooping Crane Chicks Arrives at Necedah
National Wildlife Refuge in Wisconsin
to Prepare for Migration
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 20,
2003
Media Contacts:
Rachel Levin,US Fish and Wildlife
Service, 612-713-5311
Joan Garland, International
Crane Foundation, 608-356-9462 ext. 142
A flock of
whooping crane chicks arrived by private airplane at central Wisconsin's Necedah National Wildlife Refuge June 19. A field team from Operation
Migration, Inc., the International
Crane Foundation and the U.S.
Geological Surveys Patuxent Wildlife Research Center will spend
the summer conditioning the chicks to fly behind ultralight aircraft.
This fall the team will guide the young cranes on their first southern
migration, leading them by ultralight over Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Tennessee and Georgia before arriving at Chassahowitzka
National Wildlife Refuge on Floridas Gulf coast, the cranes
winter home.
They will
be the third group of juvenile whooping cranes to take part in a project
designed to reintroduce a migratory flock of whooping cranes to a portion
of their former range in eastern North America. Whooping cranes are among
the most endangered birds in North America.
The chicks
were flown to Necedah from the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center in Laurel,
Md., where they hatched. While the reintroduction project this year will
take place with up to 18 cranes, only the 10 oldest crane chicks arrived
Thursday. The remaining cranes will be transported later this month to
Necedah, one of 540 national wildlife refuges managed by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service.
At Patuxent,
the whooping cranes are introduced to ultralight aircraft and raised in
isolation from humans. To ensure the birds remain wild, project biologists
and pilots adhere to a no-talking rule, play recorded crane calls and
wear costumes designed to mask the human form whenever they are around
the cranes. Biologists from the International Crane Foundation and the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will monitor the cranes over the winter
and track them next spring during their return migration, which they will
undertake unaided by ultralight aircraft.
All but two
of the 21 cranes from the 2001 and 2002 flocks returned to Wisconsin on
their own this spring. One crane had to be flown by aircraft from Ohio
back to Necedah NWR, and another crane remains in north-central Illinois.
The Whooping
Crane Eastern Partnership is a consortium of non-profit organizations
and government agencies. Founding members are the International Crane
Foundation, Operation Migration Inc., Wisconsin Department of Natural
Resources, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Surveys
Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and National Wildlife Health Center,
International Whooping Crane Recovery Team, National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation, and the Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin.
Many other flyway states, provinces, private
individuals and conservation groups have joined forces with and support
the partnership by donating resources, funding and personnel. More than
60 percent of the estimated $1.8 million budget comes from private sources
in the form of grants, donations and corporate sponsors.
The Whooping
Crane Eastern Partnership thanks Windway Capital Corporation for donating
its plane and pilot to transport the cranes.
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May 7, 2009
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