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One of the rarest North American birds, and also one of the largest and most magnificent. Once fairly widespread on the northern prairies, Show more. Conservation Statistics. 3Available Maps. 2Related Links. Whooping Crane. Grus americana. Species Migration.
Fifteen-million-year-old crowned crane eggs and a skeleton have been found in northeastern Nebraska. According to the fossil record, the sandhill migration has been going on for millions of...
If you observe whooping cranes in Nebraska, please fill out the online report below. Sightings can also be reported to the following contacts: Nebraska Game and Parks Commission: 402-471-0641. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: 308-379-5562. The Crane Trust’s Whooper Watch hotline: 308-224-9653.
3 Απρ 2018 · Whooping Cranes primarily migrate through central Nebraska but occasionally birds are found in the west or east (Figure 1).
Migrating Whooping Cranes have a path spanning Texas to Canada where they breed. The migration stop in Nebraska can be observed from mid-March to late April and again from late October to mid-November.
19 Μαρ 2024 · During the spring migration, whooping cranes mingle with hundreds of thousands of migrating sandhill cranes on Nebraska’s Platte River. The Platte and other wetlands in the Great...
The Whooping Crane (Grus americana) is a federal and state listed endangered migratory species. The Whooping Crane was federally listed as endangered in 1967. Major river systems used by whooping cranes in Nebraska include the Platte, Loup, Republican, and Niobrara rivers.