International Crane Foundation International Crane Foundation News

QUOTE="birdsandbats, post: 1225922, member: 14724"]Yes I know, I've seen them many times. Did I suggest there weren't? Or did you mean that as a question?[/QUOTE]
I meant it as a question sorry
 
I meant it as a question sorry
Yes, there are three breeding sites for Whooping Cranes in Wisconsin: Horicon Marsh, Necedah National Wildlife Refuge, and White River Marsh State Wildlife Area. I always see Whoopers at Necedah. I have about a 50% success rate with them at Horicon. I've only been to White River Marsh SWA once, I heard a Whooper but didn't see any.

Wisconsin birds migrate to Florida in the winter.
 
I visited yesterday and saw the new crane foundation for the first time. Visitors now follow a set path, and almost every species has a new habitat. Each one is excellent and these exhibits are all much larger than two old Pod Building yards combined. The only enclosures that remain the same are the yards for Blue Cranes, Wattled Cranes, Whooping Cranes, Gray Crowned Cranes, plus the old Black Crowned Crane yard (which now holds Demoiselle). Each species now has its own wetland, plus a tall grassy field. A couple of habitats are even walk-in. The signage has been redone for all of the species as well and is among the best zoo signage I have ever seen. I will upload photos to the gallery soon.

The Whooping, Black-necked, and White-necked Cranes were all on nests.
 
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Any follow up with their projects to reintroduce whooping cranes? I am following this with interest for some years.

Considering that groups of zoo-bred whooping cranes usually failed to develop into a wild insurance population. I wondered briefly if they could transplant some wild whooping cranes from Texas to another reserve? Experienced wild birds could be the best candidates to start an insurance population, develop a new migration route etc. Although they might also fly back to their old place.
 
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