Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumCool! NPS Confirms Hatching Of California Condor Chick In Zion National Park
Mods: Press release
Zion National Park Its official: a pair of California condors are raising a chick in Utah.
For weeks, biologists from several agencies and groups have focused their attention on a rock cavity at Zion National Park. The cavity is 1,000 feet above a remote canyon floor. Inside the cavity, the biologists were hoping a pair of California condors had hatched an egg. Their hopes were realized on June 25 when a condor chick made its first appearance on the edge of the nest. This chick is the offspring of first-time nesting parents. The occasion is particularly momentous because the results of first-time nesters often fail.
This is the first documented occurrence of California condors raising a chick in Utah, says Eddie Feltes, condor project manager with The Peregrine Fund. This is great news. This pair of condors, and their newly-hatched chick, could be a major step toward California condors reestablishing themselves in southern Utah.
Keith Day, regional wildlife biologist for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, says the chick wont try to fly until November or December. California condors take about six months to fledge, he says. Their fledging period is the longest of any bird in North America. Day says the parents will spend the next year raising the chick. California condors typically produce one chick every other year, he says, so they probably wont nest again until the early months of 2016. Fred Armstrong, chief of resource management and research with Zion National Park, says that many people are wondering where the nest site is located. Unfortunately, he says, we cant provide that information because these birds are protected under the Endangered Species Act.
According to Armstrong, Our top priorities are to allow the chick to grow and develop in a natural environment without significant human influence, keep it safe, and to protect park resources in the area where the chick is located. Those who are curious to see what the chick might look like should visit the condor camera at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park at http://www.sandiegozooglobal.org/video/condor_cam. The zoo had a condor hatch in their rearing facility within days of this wild-born condor.
The Peregrine Fund biologists found the nest by following radio and Global Positioning System signals from transmitters mounted on each of the chicks parents. They started keeping a close eye on the birds after the pair exhibited nesting behavior this past spring.
Biologists and the condor recovery program partner agencies got really excited when the birds started displaying behavior that indicated they were incubating an egg. The excitement grew even more when the pair showed signs they were tending a chick. On June 25, the chick made its first appearance on the edge of the nest.
It was only a matter of time before the birds started nesting in Utah, says Chris Parish, condor field project supervisor with The Peregrine Fund. There is great habitat in Utah. It didnt take long for the condors to find it.
Working cooperatively with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, the Arizona Game and Fish Department, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service, and the National Park Service, The Peregrine Fund has taken the lead on reintroducing and restoring this federally endangered species in northern Arizona and southern Utah.
For more information on the California condor recovery program, please visit www.peregrinefund.org/projects/california-condor,
or www.facebook.com/CondorCliffs
EDIT
http://www.nps.gov/zion/parknews/condor-chick-in-znp.htm
oldandhappy
(6,719 posts)Lots of nice updrafts for them there in Zion. Nice extension of their territory. Go condors!
Fred Friendlier
(81 posts)I just hope that the dorks who pushed over the goblin, or their idiot brothers who vandalized Nine Mile Canyon, don't get it into the tiny heads to go hunting in Zion.
catbyte
(34,386 posts)They're still critically endangered, but it's awesome to see them breed outside of a zoo.
DirkGently
(12,151 posts)Nac Mac Feegle
(971 posts)Which is adjacent to Zion N.P. I interact with a lot of National Parks Service people.
The NPS people are REALLY protective of the condors. The amount of work they put in to protection, support, and care of these birds is amazing.
There was a rancher that had a horse die a few weeks ago, and the Parks Service took the corpse by helicopter to a remote area as a special treat for the condors.
They are amazing birds. In the southwest, if you see a large bird gliding, the way to tell a condor from a vulture at a distance is to look at the wings. The vulture will have a shallow "V" shape, but a condors' wings will be flat.
Bette Noir
(3,581 posts)while turkey vultures wings are black on the leading edge, and lighter behind.
I see condors whenever I'm in Big Sur, which has at least 3 dozen birds. Last time I was there, a condor was sitting in a tree next to the highway, not more than 5 feet from me. Thrill!
Skittles
(153,160 posts)awesome news