The Guardian (USA)

Top-flight recovery: the inspiring comeback of the California condor

- Patrick Greenfield

Despite being the largest flying bird in North America, with a wingspan of up to three metres, you would have been hard pushed to see a California condor in the wild in the 1980s. In a last-ditch effort to save the birds, after decades of persecutio­n and population collapse, the few remaining were captured in 1987 for a multimilli­on-dollar intensive conservati­on programme.

Today, there are more than 200 in the wild, and local people are already starting to notice. In May 2021, about 10% of the entire population of the birds in the Golden State decided to roost on a woman’s home in Tehachapi, southern California, damaging her decking with “concrete-like” excrement, an incident that went viral on Twitter when her daughter posted photos.

Amid the ominous warnings about the collapse of Earth’s web of life and the consequenc­es for human civilisati­on, the California condor has become a powerful symbol of what conservati­on can achieve.

Several studies have shown that the continued decline of biodiversi­ty around the world is not an inevitabil­ity. Alongside the California condor, the Iberian lynx, Przewalski’s horse and

Puerto Rican amazon parrot are among 48 saved from extinction by conservati­onists.

A new metric published by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) last year, known as thre Green Status of Species, is helping scientists plot a path to recovery for threatened animals and plants, not just halt their extinction. It estimates the California condor, despite still being listed as critically endangered on the IUCN red list, has the potential for “a significan­t rebound over the next century” across its previous range from British Columbia to Baja California, giving hope to many more of the one million species threatened with extinction.

“Extinction risk, which we’ve used to measure conservati­on progress for decades, is a very absolute thing. A species is either at risk of extinction or it’s not. Recovery, however, is relative,” says Molly Grace, a University of Oxford researcher who led the developmen­t of the IUCN’s green status tool. “Every species exists in different abundances and different distributi­ons across the planet, so recovery has to be measured relatively.”

The pink pigeon, the burrowing bettong and Sumatran rhino were among the first 181 species to be assessed by 200 scientists from 171 institutio­ns in the decade-long effort to develop the green status metric, which looked at historical population size, present-day distributi­on, the success of previous conservati­on efforts and viable habitat.

The path to recovery is precarious. For the California condor, lead poisoning from the accidental ingestion of bullets used by hunters remains a threat and is responsibl­e for about 50% of all known causes of death of the birds. The heavy metal builds up in their bodies over time as they eat carrion, meaning they often do not survive, even if treated.

California became the first state to introduce a ban on lead ammunition to protect wildlife, in 2019, while in Arizona and Utah, where condors have been reintroduc­ed around the Vermilion Cliffs, hunters purchasing biggame permits have been given $50 worth of lead-free ammunition to help protect the birds.

Just as in South America, where the condor is an important Inca symbol alongside the puma and snake, America’s largest wild birds are sacred in California. In the north of the state, the Yurok people are working with the authoritie­s to continue its recovery.

Joseph L James, chairman of the

Yurok tribe, told the Guardian earlier this year: “Condor reintroduc­tion is a real-life manifestat­ion of our cultural commitment to restore and protect the planet for future generation­s.”

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

Extinction risk is a very absolute thing. Recovery, however, is relative

Molly Grace, researcher

 ?? Marcio José Sánchez/AP ?? California condors at a watering hole in the Ventana Wilderness, California. The bird is making an impressive comeback from near extinction three decades ago. Photograph:
Marcio José Sánchez/AP California condors at a watering hole in the Ventana Wilderness, California. The bird is making an impressive comeback from near extinction three decades ago. Photograph:
 ?? Cinda Mickols/AP ?? California condors on Cinda Mickols’s porch railing in Tehachapi. Photograph:
Cinda Mickols/AP California condors on Cinda Mickols’s porch railing in Tehachapi. Photograph:

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