Whooping cranes see continued growth in numbers
In 1941, only 21 whooping cranes existed in the world, but through decades of painstaking efforts the endangered whooping cranes now number some 650 in the wild.
At least 500 of those whooping cranes survive in the Wood Buffalo Aransas Texas flock, which migrates through Saskatchewan twice yearly, although the exact number won’t be available until after counts are completed later this winter.
Brian Johns, a board member of the International Whooping Crane Conservation Association, said this growth in population acts as proof that conservation efforts can help to restore critically endangered species to higher populations.
“Whooping cranes have been endangered for quite some time. All the birds we have currently are related to three females,” Johns said. “It shows that conservation efforts can bring a species back from the brink of extinction, however; it is very costly and takes a lot of time. If we can save a species such as the whooping crane from extinction, then there is hope for other species as well.”