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| Whooping
Crane Migration Update: April 6, 2007 |
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Today's
Report Includes:
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W1-06,
hanging out with friends. >>
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| Migration
Map and Highlights: Who's
Home? |
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Departure
Log
Click
for migration animation >> |
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Most
of the Western wild flock is still wintering in Texas. We're excited
about their migration
starting any day now! And we're REALLY excited about all the people
seeing and reporting migrating Whoopers so we can track their
journey!
At least
43 of the new Eastern flock's Whoopers had returned to the
Finish Line in
Wisconsin by
April
2! But a few
went to Michigan instead. And Crane #407 is back home
WITHOUT his travel buddy, the wayward #309. She peeled off and went
astray
for the
FOURTH
spring
in a row. Will she ever return to Wisconsin on her own? Migration:
a mystery and a miracle.
Life
story pages are updated as information arrives (scroll down
to "Spring 2007" on each life story page). As locations are reported
or confirmed, the
migration progress of both flocks appears live
on our MapServer!
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| Tom
Stehn Reports:
Crane Differences |
Read >>
Tom Stehn's report |
What
tall tale does Tom like to tell people looking for the Whoopers on windy
days? Why is most of this
flock of 237 still in Texas, and when does Tom say they'll leave? Find
out which
differences between Sandhills and Whoopers led to the Whoopers becoming
endangered.
Once again,
Tom makes us laugh — and also makes us think! (Next week he'll make
us subtract, as he flies over the refuge to count the cranes still there.) |
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| Compare: Current
Range, Former Range >>
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As
Tom told you in this week's report, there were once many more Whooping
Cranes. Enlarge
this map to see the legend. What does the map show?
Use
the map to locate
the main (Western) flock's
- CURRENT
summer and winter homes;
- FORMER
summer and winter homes.
Use an
atlas to locate the new Eastern flock's
- summer
nesting home at Necedah (say "Nuh
SEED uh")
NWR in Wisconsin. (It's near Tomah, WI.)
- winter
home on central Florida's Gulf
Coast (just north of Tampa).
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Look
Closer >>
How do current ranges and former ranges for the two flocks compare? |
| Journal: Why
Michigan? |

Your Whooping
Crane Journal. >> |
Now
that you're thinking about where Whoopers are found, check the migration map to
see how many Eastern Flock cranes are in Michigan. (OR, scroll
down to Spring 2007 on life story pages
for these birds: #502, #503, #507, #309, #318,
and DAR33-05.)
- Why do
you think a Whooping Crane that started out in Wisconsin
might go to Michigan for the summer instead?
Write your
ideas in your journal. |
| This
Week's Crane Resources |
- Ask
the Expert: Closes
Today, April 6! >>
- View
Video: Hear
and See Whoopers in Flight >> (12
seconds)
- Discover: Endangered
Whooping Cranes: The Story Behind a Stamp
>>
- Remember: Whooper
Happenings Podcast Tribute to the Class of HY2006 >>
- Whooping
Crane Migration Journals (click-and-print) >>
- Whooping
Cranes for Kids (booklets,
photos, videos) >>
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The
Next Whooping Crane Migration Update Will Be Posted on
April 13, 2007.
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1997-2008 Journey North. All Rights Reserved. Questions or comments?
Contact us. |
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