Record Number of Wild Condor Chicks Hatched in Arizona this Year

   09.21.11

Record Number of Wild Condor Chicks Hatched in Arizona this Year

VERMILION CLIFFS, Ariz. — For the first time, three California condor chicks have hatched in the wild in Arizona during a breeding season. Field team biologists confirmed the presence of the chicks in stages throughout the summer breeding season.

The first chick was confirmed soon after it hatched in April because the nest was located in a place that allowed easier access for monitoring than the other two suspected nests. The other two nests were in caves deep in the Grand Canyon, making it more difficult to obtain good vantage points, but the adults’ behavior helped provide clues that chicks were present. The chicks were finally confirmed in August and September once they were old enough to venture to the opening of the nest caves.

“We are delighted to see our wild population reproducing and increasing their numbers on their own,” said Eddie Feltes, field manager for The Peregrine Fund in northern Arizona and southern Utah. “Three chicks in one year increases our confidence that this endangered species will thrive again someday without our assistance.”

Two of the nests are located on the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, and one is on the Kaibab Plateau.

The three young condors – now about six months old — bring to 15 the number of chicks hatched in the wild since condors were first released in Arizona in 1996. The newest members of the wild flock are expected to take their first flights in October. They will remain dependent on their parents for about another year.

The chicks bring the total number of California condors in the world to 396, from a low of just 22 in the 1980s. Of those, 196 are in the wild, with 67 in the Arizona-Utah population.

The parents of the three chicks were produced in captivity at The Peregrine Fund’s World Center for Birds of Prey in Boise, Idaho, and the Los Angeles Zoo.

Young birds are released to the wild at a release site in Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in northern Arizona.

The recovery effort is a cooperative program by federal, state, and private partners, including the Arizona Game and Fish Department, The Peregrine Fund, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources Division, and Kaibab National Forest.

For more information on condors, visit www.azgfd.gov/condors.

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