Personality and History Migration
Training: She
missed a few days of training in the first weeks of her life due
slight health problem, but she quickly recovered. She is dominant
over 502, who is a very scared bird in general. On May 12, #501 was
a bit of a hassle during training. During circle
pen training, the pilot/trainer stops occasionally to give treats
to
the birds
in the
little inner-circle of sand. After each of these brief stops, 501
chased after 502 as she came running after Mark Nipper (in costume
in the trike). Mark wasn't sure if 502 was following him and the
trike, or just running away from 501--but it worked out well. So
far 501 doesn't have the "hate" (though she is getting
close), and just seems to be asserting her dominance. She swallowed
a puppet string. History She did just great, and landed safely with the 19-bird flock on December 13 at the holding pen at Halpata Preserve. The cranes will be moved 26 miles to their final release pen at Chassahowitzka NWR ("Chass") in mid-January after all the older cranes have dispersed from the pen site. The
pilots and ultralights tried to move the birds on January 9. Crane
#501 made
it to Chass on the third day of trying, January 11. HOME for the
winter! Spring 2006: Began first spring migration from the "Chass" pen site March 28 with all flock members except 520. This flock of 18 split at roost time on March 28, and fourteen juveniles (501, 502, 503, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 512, 514, 519, 523, and 524) stayed together. They probably roosted near the confluence of 3 counties (Turner, Crisp and Wilcox) in Georgia. They didn't move the next day. On March 30 they resumed migration and roosted in Hamilton County, TN. The next roosting place was March 31 in Spence County, KY; April 1 in Jefferson County, IN; April 2 and 3 in DuPage County, IL; April 4 in McHenry County, IL. (past Chicago). They are determined to get back to Wisconsin! They flew two days in rain, and in stong headwinds on April 4. On April 5 they resumed migration, stopping in Sauk County, WI—just short of Necedah NWR! Tracker Richard Urbanek was monitoring them the morning of April 6 when they took off. They completed spring migration as they passed the SW corner of Necedah NWR just after noon. (They kept going! They landed, foraged, and roosted that night in nearby Trempealeau County, WI.) Fall 2006: Female #501 began migration with #408 on November 3. They roosted that night in Boone County, Illinois. They were in Kankakee County, IL on November 11-12. They successfully migrated to Florida, where #501 and #408 remained in the subadult flock in Pasco County, FL. Spring 2007: Began migration March 19 (with #408 and #514). They arrived together at Necedah NWR on March 29. Her nonfunctional transmitter was replaced on August 30, 2007. Fall
2007: Crane #501 and male #310 left Necedah
NWR on migration November 22 and made it to
Jasper-Pulaski wildlife area in Indiana that day. They
continued Spring 2008: Confirmed back at Necedah NWR March 29 with mate #310. Last summer the pair built a nest so hopes were high for nesting again. But no sooner had they settled on their territory than #27-06 took over and drove off #310's mate. That didn't last long, and #501 was next seen with male #105! Will she mate and lay eggs this summer??? Last updated: 4/10/08
Back to "Meet the Flock 2005"
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