Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
Category: South-Southeast Asia
The Value of Human Connectivity for Crane Conservation
In our current state of lockdown, we have an opportunity to link to each other within and across countries and to raise the awareness and visibility of the connections among cranes, wetlands and people.
Notes from the President – An Important COVID-19 Message from our CEO
We feel it’s imperative that we share with you steps we have taken to keep people safe, help stop the spread of COVID-19, and continue caring for cranes.
Notes from the President – Birds Are Disappearing
But We Can Learn From Decades of Successful Crane Conservation.
In the News – October 2019
Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
Notes from the President: Saving Cranes, Changing Lives
What does supporting girls to stay in school, marketing handicrafts, planting bamboo or managing cattle have to do with our mission to save cranes and wetlands? Everything!
Sarus Crane population surveys in Myanmar Discover New Crane Sites
A small population of about 400 Sarus Cranes occurs in Myanmar, mostly in the Ayeyarwady River Delta. During the crane’s breeding season last year, the Myanmar Crane Team conducted weekly nest surveys and a population survey. Learn what “first” the team discovered during their research!
Won’t you be my neighbor? Studying Sarus and Brolga in northern Australia
Yesterday evening (India time), I received a message from the Editor that our submission has been accepted for publication in the journal “Emu – Austral Ornithology.” This journal is Australia’s foremost source of scientific information on birds, and it is not easy to get work published here. Wooo–hooo!!
In the News – October 2018
Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
Cranes and Agriculture: A Global Guide for Sharing the Landscape – Just Published!
The need to share information via a publication that outlines how cranes can live harmoniously on agricultural landscapes with farmers and agricultural producers served as the impetus for a group of researchers and specialists to create the publication “Cranes and Agriculture: A Global Guide for Sharing the Landscape.”