11 more endangered whooping cranes in southwest Louisiana
Eleven young endangered whooping cranes are in southwest Louisiana, being prepared to join 69 adults in the wild.
The juveniles will spend about two weeks in a net-covered pen at the White Lake Wetlands Conservation Area near Gueydan.
Whooping cranes are among the world's largest and rarest birds. The 850 or so alive today all descended from 15 that lived in coastal Texas in the 1940s.
The 11 brought to White Lake on Tuesday are still mottled brown and white. As adults, theyll be about 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall, white with black wingtips and have nearly featherless red caps.
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries biologist Sara Zimorski said Thursday that the new arrivals will be counted as part of the flock once theyre released to a bigger uncovered pen, about Nov. 25.
The cranes can fly out, but most predators big enough to endanger them cannot get in.
They often land completely outside the pen when they first fly and sometimes it takes them several days to figure out they can fly in and out of the open release pen, Zimorski wrote in a text message.
https://www.chron.com/news/texas/article/11-more-endangered-whooping-cranes-in-SW-Louisiana-14836002.php