0 favorites     0 comments    154 visits

1/1000 f/7.1 247.0 mm ISO 160

Canon PowerShot SX60 HS

3.8-247.0 mm

EXIF - See more details

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

nature
Anne Elliott
ENDANGERED
© All Rights Reserved
Whooping Crane
Grus americana
tracking device
SX60
Canon SX60
© Anne Elliott 2019
South Texas
Aransas National Wildlife Reserve
Aransas/Wood Buffalo group
21 March 2019
annkelliott
United States of America
wildlife
bird
close-up
rare
outdoor
legs
adult
avian
Canon
U.S.A.
Crane
US
Texas
number tag


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

154 visits


Day 3, leg band & tracking device, Whooping Crane Dad

Day 3, leg band & tracking device, Whooping Crane Dad
WARNING! I will try not to post too many photos of this amazing little family of three Whooping Cranes - but I already know I will FAIL miserably : ) What a huge privilege to be able to watch them preening, feeding and interacting!

This is a close-up of the leg band and tracking device on the legs of the male Whooping Crane in the little family of three, that we spent quite a lot of time observing. What a wonderful family, with the youngster (colt) learning how to preen and how to catch food, especially from watching Dad. Our presence seemed to have zero affect on these Cranes, as they went about their daily routines. So neat to know that all these Whooping Cranes will fly north to Alberta, my own province, where they will spend the summer. Wise birds, avoiding our many months of brutal winter weather up north!

This is a video that shows the capture of a wild Whooping Crane adult and a tracking device being attached:

youtu.be/YtVt842trpo

"Cellular Tracking Technologies is privileged to be working with the scientists employed by both the US and Canadian federal governments in the international team effort to monitor and protect the last remaining natural population of the Whooping Crane (Grus americana).

The so-called “Wood Buffalo-Aransas” population is the only remaining group of Whooping Cranes that has continued to nest, migrate, and overwinter in the traditional areas where they were first documented by Western ornithologists. The entire Whooping Crane species consists of only 437 wild individuals among four populations, three of which were artificially reared and reintroduced to the wild, plus 162 individuals in captivity (as of 2011). However, the only surviving remnant of the naturally-occurring Whooping Crane population is the Wood Buffalo-Aransas flock, consisting of only 283 individuals (as of the winter of 2011-12). This is the only group of Whooping Cranes that has managed to continually pass on the traditional ways of life of this species, in an unbroken chain of chick-rearing and parenting by birds that can live more than 30 years in the wild.

The vital nesting grounds lie in the vast Wood Buffalo National Park, the largest national park in Canada. The park is an immense area, a sprawling 17,300 square miles (44,807 km²), spanning northeastern Alberta into the southern Northwest Territories. Amazingly, Wood Buffalo National Park is larger than nine US states.

The equally vital wintering grounds lie in southern Texas, along the Gulf of Mexico. In winter, Whooping Cranes are seafood aficionados, preying on blue crabs and clams in the brackish Gulf Coast marshes. Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, near Rockport, TX, is one of the few areas of protected public property where people can reliably visit and expect to see these rare and special birds. This is also the exact area where Hurricane Harvey came ashore as a powerful Category 4 storm on 26 August 2017, with sustained winds of 130 mph (209 km/h). Hurricane Harvey went on to set records for both the astounding amounts of rainfall in the Houston metropolitan area, as well as the cost of the damage inflicted to human structures. The storm is currently tied with 2005’s Hurricane Katrina as the costliest tropical cyclone to hit the United States. Luckily, the Whooping Crane population was still up in Canada when the storm hit." From link below.

celltracktech.com/portfolio/whooping-cranes/

Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.