WHAT IT TAKES
Dec 17, 2020
4 minutes
Words: Dinyar Godrej
Something to whoop about
The whooping crane, a migratory species that traversed between sites in the US and Western Canada, had all but died out by the mid-1940s, with just 21 birds remaining. Habitat loss and indiscriminate hunting had just about done it in. Hunting the birds had been banned for over 20 years by then, but recovery from such small numbers was not guaranteed.
In the 1960s biologists embarked on a captive breeding programme to boost numbers. This involved getting the monogamous birds to produce more than one clutch of eggs every breeding season, by taking away the first eggs laid for artificial incubation, encouraging the couple to mate again and lay more. Chicks born from eggs left in the nest were
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