Archive for the 'Condor News' Category

Condor Update for 2009 by Jan Hamber

To all,
Here’s a tiny look at what happened in the California Condor Recovery Program during 2009.
The year began with a total population of 321 condors and ended with an increase of 21 birds for a total population of 350.

In an amazing display of cooperative effort on the part of many organizations and staff, here are where those 350 birds were located. 162 were in captivity at 7 zoos. Some were in captive breeding facilities and others on display. The zoos involved with captive breeding are: Los Angeles, San Diego Wild Animal Park, World Center for Birds of Prey in Boise (run by the Peregrine Fund), and the Oregon Zoo. Zoos that have condors on display are: San Diego Wild Animal Park & San Diego Zoo, Chapultepec Zoo in Mexico City, and our own Santa Barbara Zoo. Four immatures and 1 adult are now on display at SBZ.

Condors flying in the wild are 65 in Arizona, 18 in Baja California and 95 in the Southern California complex. The last group is composed of 34 birds at Hopper Mountain & Bitter Creek National Wildlife Refuges run by USFWS, 20 in the Big Sur area managed by the Ventana Wildlife Society and 25 released at Pinnacles National Monument under the auspices of the National Park Service.

There are now 16 wild fledged condors in Southern California: 9 in Hopper NWR, 6 in Big Sur and 1 (brand new last year) at Pinnacles and 10 in Arizona. None of the 3 eggs laid in Baja have made it to
fledging.

21 birds died: several from predation by coyotes, one by strangulation (a condor twisted a rope, left behind by a climber, into a noose and hung himself), several from lead poisoning but many
from unknown causes.

A new group, Friends of the California Condor - Wild and Free was formed last year. The group is composed of individuals who assist with field work, education and fund raising. One person put
out 1 newsletter in July 2009. I have attached it to this message for those who would like to learn more about the events at Hopper NWR.

The fate of the nests mentioned in the newsletter is as follows: HC 09 - chick fledged and is doing well, AB 09 - chick fledged as is doing well, DG 09 - chick died after ingesting too much trash, KR 09 - chick disappeared from nest cavity when no one was there to monitor the nest. Several other nest failed prior to the newsletter’s publication. They were HB 09 where an egg was seen shortly after laying but disappeared several days later (raven predation?) and TC 09 where a bear was seen entering the nest cave. When FWS staff arrived a few days later there was no chick to be
found (bear predation?).

So now a new year has begun and there are eggs at LAZ & SDWAP and 1 egg at Hopper by the same pair (HB) that lost the egg last year.

Hope you enjoyed the update,
Jan

Condors on KSBY-TV

Tonight on the news Anchorwoman Wendy Thies aired her onsite interviews
and reported on the recent California Condor release at Bitter Creek
National Wildlife Refuge. The 5 minute news ‘exclusive’ was well-done
with a very good overview of the history of the condor recovery program
and the efforts there at Bitter Creek refuge. Our own Hi Mtn. volunteer
Marcelle Bakula also attended the release that day and made a written
report previously to this listserv.

This condor news segment will be repeating on KSBY-tv news airing
tonight -Nov. 10th - at 11pm. Wendy Thies also interviewed staff and
volunteers covering the Hi Mountain Lookout Project on KSBY-tv news in
June of 2005. We appreciate the news coverage.

Steve Schubert

California Condors back- by John FitzRandolf

Special to The SLO Telegram-Tribune by Hi Mountain volunteer John FitzRandolph

Posted on Sat, Sep. 09, 2006

For those keeping track of significant dates in California wildlife conservation history, mark April 19, 1987, in bright red ink.

On that day, the last free-flying Gymnogyps californianus — California Condor — was plucked from the wild and moved to a captive breeding program at the San Diego Zoo. Along with 26 other captured condors — all that remained from the estimated thousands who soared the western skies during the last Pleistocene epoch (ice age) 10,000 years ago — that last wild condor was knocking on extinction’s door.

Still, while North America’s largest birds, weighing up to 30 pounds with 91⁄2-foot wingspans, entered the boldest captive breeding program in U.S. history, high-visibility ornithologists, biologists and outdoor experts said it would never work.

Fortunately, those dissenters were wrong, and the condor has subsequently been resurrected, rolling away the stone of doubt for this and other endangered species.

Indeed, first-time visitors making the rocky 6-mile trek through the shallow Salinas River and up twisty Hi Mountain Road to the Hi Mountain Condor Lookout Project west of Pozo are discovering the California Condor Recovery Program is a sizzling success.

Let’s be clear: the chances of seeing a condor circling the Hi Mountain lookout site are slim, albeit the colossal birds do fly near the lookout on their pilgrimages between Big Sur/Pinnacles in Monterey County and Sespe Wilderness/Bitter Creek in Ventura County.

A pivotal point of the recovery effort is to encourage the condors to travel and socialize with other condors.

Biologists and Cal Poly interns use telemetry technology to track the condors’ movements, part of the Hi Mountain daily duties visitors can witness up close, as the birds fly, hang out and eat with other recently released condors.

Ultimately, the plan is for condors to cruise the state, find their own food, meet, mate, lay eggs, raise chicks and become prolific in the same way bald eagles re-emerged from near obscurity to their proud prolific population today. The Hi Mountain portion of that plan utilizes the combined resources of U.S. Forest

Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife and the Morro Coast Audubon Society.

Meanwhile, tentative plans are under way to create a central feeding location in the Santa Lucia Wilderness in San Luis Obispo County; condors from around the state would congregate and share nutritious meals of stillborn calves and fresh-thawed raw rats, mice and rabbits.

(Yes, that’s what they are fed by field biologists in the four release areas.)

As for the current free- flying condors, 28 thrive in the Ventana Wilderness area, 13 call Pinnacles

National Monument home, 22 live in the Sespe Wilderness and Bitter Creek areas in Ventura County and around 60 are in the Grand Canyon area.

Visitors to the Hi Mountain Research & Interpretive Center — on the ground floor of the lookout — have access to an impressive collection of native animal specimens, a Condor egg, feathers and more.

And speaking of impressive, the vistas from 3,180-foot Hi Mountain Condor Lookout are certainly that. On a clear day, looking south, the eye takes in Lopez Lake, Pismo Beach, the Nipomo Dunes, Avila and more; looking west, Santa Margarita Lake is like a little pond in the distance; to the north, Black Mountain, the San Andres Fault (Temblor Range) and some days even the snow-capped High Sierra Mountains are visible.

For camping enthusiasts, the drive up Hi Mountain Road to the condor lookout leads to the U.S. Forest

Service Hi Mountain Campground; ten campsites offer fire rings and picnic tables; it’s first-come, first served and about a mile and a half below the lookout. Other nearby hiking trails and an invitation to the public to attend the Hi Mountain Condor Lookout Open House on Oct. 14 is available online at www.condorlookout.org.

Original article:
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispotribune/sports/15478246.htm

Big Sur whale carcass and condors

Message from Joe Burnett…

Hey Folks-
On Friday, April 29, five condors from the Big Sur flock were located
feeding on a beached gray whale by Ventana crew members, Ryan Choi and
Michael Truex. The gray whale is a full size adult (about 40′ long) and
is almost completely intact. There’s no telling how long the flock will
be feasting on this carcass, it could last for months…its huge! The
whale carcass is above just above the high tide line and should stay
where it is as long as we don’t get a significant storm surge in the
next month.

Either way, it’s an exciting moment for VWS and the condor program.
Historical records:

1602- first written record for condors…observed feeding on a whale in
Monterey Bay.

1805- One condor collected at the mouth of the Columbia River while
feeding on a whale, Lewis and Clark expedition.

2006- Big Sur!

Cheers, Joe