As per usual: non-informed policies and an assault on any relevant conservation work in the US by his administration.
Another respectable age testament to best animal management and husbandry care at ICF.Tsuru, a Red-Crowned Crane that was part of the first clutch of cranes to ever hatch at ICF, has died.Tsuru was 42 years old.
Some exceptional breeding results!10 Whooping Cranes and a Hooded Crane have hatched.
I don't know how many breeding pairs ICF has, but I know, in all, ICF has 38 cranes (excluding the recently hatched birds).How many breeding pairs of whooping crane does ICF hold now?
Patuxent is transferring their cranes elsewhere because the Whooping Crane program closed. Other birds from Patuxent went to White Oak Conservation Center, Dallas Zoo, San Antonio Zoo, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, Freeport-McMoRan Audubon Species Survival Center, and Calgary Zoo.Some exceptional breeding results!
How many breeding pairs of whooping crane does ICF hold now?
BTW (also): Is Patuxent scaling down in terms of whooping crane conservation breeding (with the recent transfer of 3 pairs to ICF)?
This more or less underlines that the closure of the Patuxent wildlife base for whooping cranes puts a major strain on facilities elsewhere, in particular ICF which apart from an US and other N.American range states' crane conservation work are responsible for much international crane in situ support.
It seems they managed getting the funding in place!!!!
ICF currently has an incredible Whooping Crane exhibit, and great exhibits for both crowned cranes, Blue Cranes, and Wattled Cranes as well. But the other exhibits really aren't anything special. However, after this renovation, ICF will be able to claim not only that they keep very crane species, but that they keep every crane species in the best exhibits of their kind.Information on the $10 million renovation from the foundation's website:
Stay Involved in 2019 | International Crane Foundation
A detailed map of the International Crane Foundation in terms of how it will look in 2020 with the grand reopening:
https://www.savingcranes.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/illustrative_site_plan_2500.jpg