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  • 21
    May
    2012
    4:33pm, EDT

    California condor rises from near extinction, but still threatened by lead poisoning

    Ben Margot / AP file

    A 2-year old male California condor near Big Sur, Calif. in 2001. The species population had fallen to 22 in 1982, but an intensive captive breeding and reintroduction program have boosted the number to 405, more than half of them living in the wild.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    One of the most endangered birds in the world, the California condor, has crept back from the brink of extinction through a strenuous three-decade conservation effort. But conservationists say the giant bird can’t become a self-sufficient population in the wild again unless its habitat becomes free of lead ammunition used by hunters.

    "It’s huge," said David Shepherdson, deputy conservation division manager at the Oregon Zoo, which has a condor breeding program. "Lead poisoning from lead ammunition is the one thing preventing them from becoming a self-sustaining, non-endangered … wild population."


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    The California condor is the largest bird in North America, with a wingspan of up to 10 feet. Historically, the species' habitat ranged all the way from Baja, Mexico, to British Columbia, Canada. The mammoth bird, a type of vulture, can fly 150 miles a day.

    The population of giant California condors in the wild fell so low in 1982 — 22 birds — that U.S. Fish and Wildlife made the controversial decision to capture them all for breeding programs.


    The process has been slow and painstaking. Condors typically lay just one egg every two years in the wild, and even in captivity they rarely have more than one offspring a year. Then, if they survive, they live about the same length of time as humans.

    With three decades of work breeding and reintroducing them in the wild, the California condor population had climbed to 405 in an April 30 census — including more than 226 living in the wild, and another 179 living in zoos and four breeding centers, according to a report in The Oregonian, citing U.S. Fish and Wildlife officials.

    But for condors, which are scavengers that feed on dead animals and "gut piles" left behind by hunters that contain fragments of lead bullets, lead poisoning is the leading cause of death. The poisoning causes a slow death by starvation or weakens the birds, making them vulnerable to predators.

    Tammy Spratt / AP

    A California condor egg that was on the verge of hatching at the San Diego Zoo in March. Condor's typically lay one egg every two years in the wild.

    Condors were first reintroduced to the Vermilion Cliffs near the Arizona-Utah border in 1996 and that wild population now is around 60, flying through the Kaibab National Forest, Grand Canyon National Park and lands in Utah and Nevada.

    Of those released in Arizona — one of several reintroduction sites — at least 22 have died of lead poisoning, and many others have required treatment for lead poisoning through a process of "leeching" called kelation, said Kathy Sullivan, a biologist who coordinates the condor program for Arizona Game and Fish.

    In California, hunters are barred from using lead ammunition in areas designated condor habitat. The alternative ammunition is often more expensive and harder to find.

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    On Friday, several environmental groups issued a notice of intent to sue the U.S. Forest Service under the Endangered Species Act for allowing the continued use of lead ammunition in the Kaibab National Forest, a key feeding area for condors released in Arizona.

    Banning lead ammunition "isn't like some kind of radical idea," said Sandy Bahr, director for the Grand Canyon Chapter of the Sierra Club, one of the groups threatening to sue. "There has been a requirement for a pretty long time for hunters who are hunting water fowl to use non-lead ammunition. … To get the manufacturers and widespread non-lead ammunition it has to be required.

    "(The California condor) is a wonderful comeback story and illustration of how the Endangered Species Act works, and how a concerted effort by many interests can result in giving a species a second chance," said Bahr of the Sierra Club, an environmental lobbying group. "But we can’t just sit back and breathe a sigh of relief."

    Officials at Kaibab National Forest did not respond to calls for comment.

    But Sullivan, the condor program coordinator for Arizona Game and Fish, said that the state has an effective voluntary program for hunters in Arizona built through education and outreach. Licences for deer hunting and other game are drawn by lottery, and the state actually provides free non-lead ammunition to those whose names are drawn. She said a portion of hunters, instead of changing ammunition, have agreed to remove "gut piles" to prevent lead poisoning of condors. In total, the state has at least 80 percent participation by hunters.

    Sullivan said the continuing lead poisoning of Arizona-released condors appears to be because many are now flying into neighboring Utah where there is no such program to limit lead exposure.

    "We have a pretty darn successful program in Arizona, but the birds have shifted up to Utah," said Sullivan. "In my opinion that’s where the efforts should be."

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    144 comments

    The idea that lead shot doesn't harm wildlife is total convervative nonsense. This HAS been proven for a very long time. The use of lead ammunition in wildlife sensitive areas is simply laziness on the part of those shooting either for hunting or target shooting. You people, conservative willfully i …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, conservation, condor, kari-huus
  • 2
    Dec
    2011
    8:46pm, EST

    Condor biologist killed in Big Sur windstorm

    By Amy Larson, KSBW.com

    BIG SUR, Calif. -- A wildlife biologist in Big Sur was killed by a tree during a wild windstorm that wreaked havoc in many areas of the Central Coast.

    Michael Tyner, 35, of Big Sur, was working for the Ventana Wildlife Society in one of Big Sur's redwood forests when he was struck by tree that toppled over at 2:50 p.m Wednesday.

    Wednesday's 40-60 mph gusts caused the tree to uproot and slam to the ground near North Coast Road at mile marker 16.

    Read the original story at KSBW.com

    "Tyner died instantly from his injuries," the Monterey County sheriff's coroner detective Diana Schumacher said. "A forensic examination confirmed his death was a result of blunt force head injuries."

    Tyner's death was the first caused by this week's wind storm, which left a path of destruction across California and Utah.

    Tyner was a highly respected field supervisor for the Ventana Wildlife Society's California Condor Recovery Program, based in Monterey.

    "It was truly an honor to work alongside Mike," his close friend and co-worker Joe Burnett said.

    "He was truly an exceptional biologist, a great friend, and staunch protector of all natural things," Burnett said. "Mike will be dearly missed and his positive impacts on Big Sur’s natural beauty will live on through the condors. I’m almost sure he’s up there soaring with them now."

    An avid birder, Tyner graduated from California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo and began studying songbirds along the Carmel River with the society in 2002.

    Winds howl across LA-area for second night

    Wind gusts finally eased up on Friday afternoon, blowing at a mere 1 mph in Santa Cruz and 3 mph in Monterey.

    This was a big change from Wednesday night, when sustained winds howled at 40 mph and gusts hit 70 mph in Santa Cruz.

    At least four homes in Santa Cruz County were destroyed by tumbling trees during the storm. A two-story house in Scotts Valley on Baja Sol Drive had a giant redwood tree slice well into its roof Thursday night. Everyone in the house escaped without injuries.

    Several other Scotts Valley residents reported that their cars and trucks were smashed by tumbling trees.

    PG&E used a helicopter Friday while attempting to repair power supplies for thousands of Scotts Valley residents and business owners who are sitting in the dark.

    Customers in Boulder Creek, Bonny Doon, Watsonville, Corralitos and Freedom are also without power.

    Nearly two dozen fires erupted Thursday in Northern California but most were confined to a few acres of land. Low humidity and high winds were blamed for fanning the fires.

    KSBW.com is the website for the NBC affiliate in Salinas, Calif.

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    9 comments

    My heart goes out to his family.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: wind, southern-california, windstorm, condor

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