Contacts... Michael Woodbridge (805) 644-5185
FYI – 12/17/2008 US Fish & Wildlife news release.
Seven wild California condor chicks have left their nests in
California this year—marking a successful breeding season. With
these seven new chicks and others in Arizona and Baja, the wild
population of California condors now outnumbers those in
captivity for the first time since the birds started being
reintroduced in 1992.
The addition of seven more endangered California condors
brings the population in California to more than 80 birds flying
free in the wild. The total number of California condors
existing in the world today is more than 320. This is a
remarkable turnaround, after the total population reached a low
of merely 22 wild birds in 1982.
A captive breeding program was started in 1983, and in 1987
all California condors were brought in to captivity to start an
urgent breeding program at the Los Angeles Zoo and San Diego
Wildlife Park. After all the wild birds were captured in 1987,
the California Condor Recovery Program worked to steadily grow
the number of condors in captivity and in the wild. The recovery
plan for California condors calls for three distinct
populations, each with at least 150 birds and 15 breeding pairs
As the Recovery Program works towards this goal, it has
reached an important milestone in the process. There are now 167
condors flying free in the wild, as opposed to 160 currently in
captivity as part of the breeding program.
“This is an exciting time for the California condor recovery
effort,” said Marc Weitzel, Project Leader for the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service’s Hopper Mountain National Wildlife Refuge.
“We’ve come a long way since the Recovery Program began
reintroducing captive-bred condors to the wild in 1992, and
while we still have a ways to go, we are making tremendous
progress—with more condors in the wild than there have been in
approximately 50 years.”
The California condor is the largest bird in North America,
weighing as much as twenty-five pounds. During the Pleistocene
era, the condor could be found across the United States.
California condors do not kill their food; they are scavengers,
eating carcasses they find during long soaring flights using
their more than nine-foot wingspan. The California condor was
put on the federal Endangered Species List in 1968. Threats to
the condor’s survival include lead poisoning from spent
ammunition, collisions with power lines, and accidental and
intentional shooting, among others. For more information about
California Condors and Hopper Mountain National Wildlife Refuge
Complex visit www.fws.gov/hoppermountain.
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with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife,
plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the
American people. We are both a leader and trusted partner in
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