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A Midwest Migration With Endangered Whooping Cranes, Katherine Anne Hill
A Midwest Migration With Endangered Whooping Cranes, Katherine Anne Hill
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In 1941, the world’s last migratory flock of whooping cranes was just 15 birds strong. Today, that flock has grown to over 500 birds and is increasing exponentially every year. But even as the flock continues to recover, their migratory corridor continues to shrink, due to the destruction of habitat by industrial agriculture, energy development, and other industries.
But throughout the most sparsely populated stretches of the Central Flyway, whooping cranes have some unlikely allies, too.
In Nebraska and Kansas, where wetlands and native prairie grasses have historically been drained, burned, and converted to cropland, some farmers are reversing that …