Pictured
is a young California Condor and an older one in flight-glide
above. |
SAN DIEGO - In more recent times, the California condor has become
the subject of an intense and sometimes controversial effort to
save the species from extinction. Faced with rapidly declining
numbers, scientists began collecting wild-laid eggs and capturing
free-flying birds to breed them in captivity with the goal of
eventually restoring the condor to its rightful place in the California
skies.
As
part of this effort, biologists captured birds, weighed and measured
them, and fitted some with tags and radio transmitters so they
could be monitored and identified after being released. Biologists
learned about the condors' feeding, mating, and chick-rearing
habits, as well as their habitat needs. They also confirmed that
California condor pairs that lost an egg would lay a second or
even a third one.
To
increase the condors' egg production, the biologists began removing
eggs laid in the wild in 1983. The eggs were taken to either the
San Diego Wild Animal Park or the Los Angeles Zoo for hatching.
The first California condor hatched in captivity in 1983. Nicknamed
"Sisquoc," this condor and subsequent chicks hatched from wild-laid
eggs were raised in boxes that simulated the caves their parents
used. Zookeepers kept human contact to a minimum by feeding the
chicks with hand puppets made to look like adult condors.
Normally,
California condors do not become sexually mature until the age
of 6 and may not start breeding until age 7 or 8. They nest in
caves or clefts on cliffs that usually have nearby trees for roosting
and a clear approach for easy take-offs and landings. Typically,
an adult pair lays one egg every other year, with the fledgling
being dependent upon its parents through the next breeding season.
California
Condor in captive breeding program at the Peregrin Fund's
World Center. |
Like
all vultures, condors are carrion-eaters. They prefer large dead
animals like deer, cattle, and sheep, but will also eat rodents
and more rarely, fish. If a meal has been particularly big, they
may have to spend hours on the ground or a low branch before they
can take off again.
Condors
are fastidious birds -- after eating, they clean their heads and
necks by rubbing them on grass, rocks, or tree branches. Condors
also bathe frequently and spend hours preening and drying their
feathers.
Condors
were probably never very numerous in North America. The species
once ranged along the entire Pacific Coast from British Columbia
to Baja California. Fossils have been found as far east as Texas,
Florida, and New York. More recently, however, they were confined
to a horseshoe-shaped area north of Los Angeles.
For
years, no one knew precisely how many California condors existed,
although they have been considered to be a declining species since
the 1890s. One estimate put their number at 100 in the early 1940s.
Another indicated there were 50 to 60 in the early 1960s. By the
late 1970s, the estimate had dropped to 25 to 30 birds.
Despite
years of study, can scientists pinpoint the reason for the bird's
decline? Some factors include illegal collection of condors and
their eggs, poisoning from substances put out by ranchers to eradicate
livestock predators, poisoning from ingesting lead fragments from
bullets embedded in animal carcasses the condors feed on, and
collisions with structures such as power lines.
In
addition, the roads, cities, housing tracts, and weekend mountain
retreats of modern civilization have replaced much of the open
country condors need to find food. Their slow rate of reproduction
and years spent reaching breeding maturity undoubtedly make the
condor population as a whole more vulnerable to these threats.
Recognizing
the California condor's perilous state, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service listed the bird as an endangered species in 1967 (under
a law that preceded the Endangered Species Act of 1973), meaning
it was considered in danger of extinction throughout all or a
significant portion of its range.
Archaeological
evidence indicates that condors have been revered by western Native
Americans for thousands of years and played a major role in their
legends and rituals. Condors were considered sacred and capable
of providing communication with the supernatural world as well
as supernatural powers.
California
condors are the largest birds in North America. They may weigh
up to 25 pounds and have wingspans of 9 1/2 feet. California condors
have bare heads and necks, dull gray-black feathers, and blunt
claws. They have a triangle-shaped patch of white, visible only
when airborne, that adorns the underside of their wings.
California
condors can soar on warm thermal updrafts for hours, reaching
speeds of more than 55 miles per hour and altitudes of 15,000
feet.
Until 1985, biologists planned to leave at least some condors
in the wild. It was believed the free-flying condors would provide
role models to captive-hatched birds that could hopefully be restored
to the wild in the 1990s.
Then,
disaster struck. Members within four of the five remaining breeding
pairs disappeared over the winter of 1984-85, and the wild population
was reduced from 15 to 9 birds. With the number of wild condors
continuing to plummet in 1986, the biologists decided to capture
all remaining wild California condors and bring them into the
captive breeding program.
The
last remaining wild California condor was trapped in 1987. Two
of these birds successfully mated and produced the first captive-
bred condor chick the following year.
programs.