In 2015, a young Whooping Crane pair built nesting platforms in Indiana for the first time since the late 1800s – one of the nests is circled in the above photo. This behavior indicates that Indiana could support not only wintering Whooping Cranes but potentially breeding cranes, too. Amy Kearns
In 2015, a young Whooping Crane pair built nesting platforms in Indiana for the first time since the late 1800s – one of the nests is circled in the above photo. This behavior indicates that Indiana could support not only wintering Whooping Cranes but potentially breeding pairs, too. Amy Kearns
In 2001, a migratory Whooping Crane population called the Eastern Migratory Population, was reintroduced to the eastern United States. The plan was for these Whooping Cranes to nest in Wisconsin and migrate to Florida for the winter. Today, Whooping Cranes in this population do not choose to winter as far south as Florida. Instead, most of these Whooping Cranes spend their winters further north, and over one-third of the population winter in Indiana at refuges such as Goose Pond Fish and Wildlife Area, Jasper-Pulaski Fish and Wildlife Area and Cane Ridge Wildlife Management Area. Indiana has increasingly become an important space for Whooping Cranes after they first began wintering here in 2007.