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Meet
the 2009 Whooping Crane Chicks!
Hatch-year
2009 of
the Eastern Flock
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Crane
# 901
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Date
Hatched |
May
3, 2009 |
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Gender |
Female |
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Egg
Source
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Patuxent
Wildlife Research Center |
Permanent
Leg Bands
(Attached
after reaching Florida)
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*Juvenile band:
White
(*pre-ship
health check at
PWRC)
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- Read
about the naming system, hatch place in
Maryland, release site in Wisconsin, over-wintering
site in Florida, and leg-band codes.
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Personality,
Early Training
Notes from
the captive breeding "hatchery" at Patuxent WRC
in Maryland:
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Click for video by Operation Migration |
Chick 901
is the oldest and, although a female, the biggest.
See this
video of 901's second time in the circle pen! Brooke (with
'robo-crane') leads 901 from her outside pen to the circle
training pen.
The little chick is focused on the puppet head as
she follows along. After leading the chick into the circle, Brooke
closes the gate and starts the engine of the training trike. The
chick startles
at the sudden noise, but quickly goes back to pecking around for
yummy
mealworms. Notice that as soon as 901 starts to lose focus, the
puppet drops more mealworms to quickly get back her attention.
By sheer
size 901 is is the
dominant chick in Cohort One (the group that includes
the 9 oldest chicks). She rarely throws her weight around and
rules the roost by her mere presence, says Bev. On June 14 chick 906
challenged 901. By both age and pecking order/hierarchy, the young
male is right in the middle of Cohort One. When
he challenged
leader
901,
he
luckily
got nowhere — because he backed down from the taller 901 before
she was tempted to pummel him!
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Cohort
1 FLYING Aug. 17! Photo Bev Paulan, Operation
Migration
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Notes
of Flight School in Wisconsin:
She was flown to Wisconsin with Cohort #1 chicks on June
25. When they were finally led into their new pen, the tired 901
took a nap. When
she awoke, she seemed right at home! Most of the chicks pecked
at their new leg bands or even the bands of other chicks. She and
910 had a staring contest while they were standing next to each
other
at
the
feeder, but one of them backed down and wandered away. That was as close
as they came to a conflict. All was peaceful on Day 1 in Wisconsin, but
in the next days #901 had a cough and respiratory problems. Her
health is being carefully watched. Like all the chicks in cohort
one, she was flying by July 20. By early August cohort one was
flying circles over the training areas. By mid-August they
were flying larger and longer circuits. By the end of August she
not only a strong flyer but healthier too.
| First
Migration South: Chick #901 (and 14 others!)
turned back to Necedah NWR when the Class of 2009 left
on their
first
migration
on October 16, 2009. They all had to try again the
next day to follow the ultralights to the migration's
first stopover site, where five flockmates landed on
Day 1. Find day-by-day
news about the flock's migration and read more about
#901 below. |
Oct.
27: Today chick 901 was a great follower,
flying to Stopover #2 with six flockmates and Richard's
ultralight. This photo was captured
from the CraneCam soon after their arrival. Many crates were
used today!
Nov
1: What's up? Chick 901 was slow to exit the pen on today's
great flight to Stopover #3. Maybe it's because she knew
she could have Brooke's plane almost all to herself. |
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Back
to "Meet the
Flock 2009"
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