Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership
NEWS RELEASE
One Endangered Juvenile Whooping Crane Discovered Alive in Florida
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 4, 2007
Contacts:
John Christian, 612-810-6955 (cell)
Joan Garland 608-356-9462,
x142; 608-381-1262 (cell)
Rachel F. Levin, (612) 713-5311; 612-309-5760 (cell)
The Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership (WCEP) is pleased to announce that
one of the juvenile cranes presumed lost in the storms that hit central
Florida on Feb. 1 and 2 has been found.
Project biologists with the International Crane Foundation picked up the
radio signal of crane 15-06 on Saturday afternoon near the pensite at the
Chassahowitzka National Wildlife Refuge where the other birds perished in
the storm. They lost the signal briefly before picking it up again on
Sunday, tracking the young bird to an area in Citrus County, some miles away
from the pensite. The juvenile crane was observed from the air in good
remote habitat with two sandhill cranes. Number 15-06 is in the same area
with three whooping cranes from the Class of 2005.
During the last leg of the ultralight-led migration last fall, crane 15-06
dropped out, but was found nearby two days later and brought to the pensite
with his flockmates.
“Finding 15-06 alive represents a ray of light during an otherwise dark time
for whooping crane recovery,” said John Christian, co-chair of the Whooping
Crane Eastern Partnership. “While we are still recovering from the initial
shock of the loss of so many other young birds, this latest development
demonstrates the resilience of this particular crane, and our partnership
will bounce back as well.”
Seventeen juvenile whooping cranes died as a result of the storms that swept
through central Florida during the evening and early morning of Feb. 1 and
2.
WCEP is still determining the cause of death of the 17 whooping cranes,
which were part of the ultralight-led “Class of 2006” and arrived at the
Chassahowitzka NWR in mid January.
Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership founding members are the International
Crane, Foundation, Operation
Migration, Inc.,Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, U.S. Geological Survey's
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.
-WCEP-
Educators
and students are encouraged to visit Journey North for information and
curriculum materials related to the whooping crane project: http://www.learner.org/jnorth/crane/index.html
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