The Mercury News

Whooping cranes return to Alabama for the winter

- By Janet McConnaugh­ey

Some migratory whooping cranes from Wisconsin are back at a national wildlife refuge in Alabama.

For the second year in a row, a wild-hatched crane known as W7-17 was the first to arrive on the 670mile flight southward to the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge in Decatur, the Internatio­nal Crane Foundation said Friday.

The 2-year-old female arrived last weekend and 13 others have followed, tracking devices and other reports show. The cranes are among about 100 in a flock that were taught to migrate from Wisconsin to Florida by following ultralight aircraft. More are likely to arrive in coming weeks, supervisor­y ranger Teresa Adams said in a telephone interview Friday.

Some will spend the winter there; others will fly on to Florida.

“With our Eastern birds, they’re kind of spread up and down the whole flyway,” said A.J. Binney, with the crane foundation in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Some winter in Indiana, flying further south if an Arctic blast hits there, he said.

Whooping cranes are among the world’s largest and rarest birds. About 850 of the birds are alive today, all descended from 15 that lived in coastal Texas in the 1940s. The adults, about 5 feet tall, are white with red caps, black mustaches and black wingtips. Juveniles are mottled brown and white.

In addition to the flock taught to migrate, about 500 whooping cranes migrate between Canada and Texas each year.

There are also 69 of the rare cranes in a non-migratory flock in Louisiana and about 150 in captivity.

The first two or three whooping cranes showed up at Wheeler in 2004, but the refuge didn’t initially publicize their presence to avoid disturbing them, Adams said.

She said that for a few years, the number of cranes was about doubling every year.

Once whooping cranes began showing up around the refuge’s visitor center and the two-story observatio­n building about 200 yards down a trail from it, the refuge began alerting the public “that we were getting these wonderful birds,” Adams said.

She said farmers are allowed to farm on part of the refuge in exchange for leaving some of their corn and soybeans in the field for ducks, geese and other migratory birds.

“The cranes like the corn,” Adams said. She said they also forage in a large nearby pond and other wetlands.

 ?? DAVE DIETER — THE HUNTSVILLE TIMES VIA AP ?? Three endangered white whooping cranes walk among a flock of gray sandhill cranes at Alabama’s Wheeler Wildlife Refuge in 2012. Cranes winter at the refuge every year.
DAVE DIETER — THE HUNTSVILLE TIMES VIA AP Three endangered white whooping cranes walk among a flock of gray sandhill cranes at Alabama’s Wheeler Wildlife Refuge in 2012. Cranes winter at the refuge every year.

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