California condor births mark soaring comeback after numbers dwindled to 22
by Maanvi Singh in San Francisco from Science | The Guardian on (#4KBKE)
The birds, whose population plummeted last century, have two new chicks: Nos 1,000 and 1,001
Nestled among the red-rock cliffs of Zion national park and the Grand Canyon, California condor chicks No 1,000 and 1,001 blinked into this world. Their birth signalled success for a decades-long program to bring North America's largest bird back from the brink of extinction.
As a result of hunting, diminishing food and dwindling territory, the number of birds in the wild numbered just 22 in the early 1980s. Lead poisoning was also a major killer, caused by inadvertently ingesting bullets that hunters left inside dead animals that the enormous birds, which have a wingspan of 9.5ft and weigh up to 25lb, scavenged for food.
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