On a fateful Saturday, March 9, afternoon, I received a call from our former local council chairperson, Happy Addy. He alerted me to a pair of chicks that had been captured from South Kiruruma by his neighbor John Bosco. Happy informed me that the captor was harboring the crane chicks and wanted to sell them.
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Volunteers Migrate Too!
It’s not just cranes that migrate. International Crane Foundation volunteers all around the world help support our mission of protecting cranes and the places they dance.
Celebrating Jim Harris’ Life and Legacy
Family, friends and colleagues are invited Sunday, June 16, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, to celebrate the life and legacy of Jim Harris, our former Director of Public Education, President and CEO and, most recently, Senior Vice President of Asia.
In the News – February 2019
Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
Wattled Crane Kotze lays first egg of the year!
Yes, we know it is still winter at our headquarters in Wisconsin, but our female Wattled Crane Kotze had other plans when she laid our first egg last month.
Whooping Cranes: Biology and Conservation
The International Crane Foundation has been a leader in endangered Whooping Crane conservation for over 25 years. Our involvement in this species’ remarkable recovery is illustrated by the depth and breadth of contributions our staff provided to a recently published volume from Academic Press: Whooping Cranes: Biology and Conservation.
In the News – January 2019
Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
Exploring Changes in the Eastern Sandhill Crane Population
Have you noticed Sandhill Cranes are wintering further north? Click here to learn more and explore the data in our interactive map.
In the News – November and December 2019
Our monthly summary of media stories highlighting the International Crane Foundation’s global programs.
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!!