ZME Science on MSN
California condors are finally nesting in the Pacific Northwest after 100 years thanks to tribe’s efforts
A pair of California condors reintroduced to the Pacific Northwest by the Yurok Tribe appears to have established the species ...
Despite Lead Ammo Ban, CA Condors Keep Dying Condors are the largest land bird in North America. When their population shrunk ...
Recent data showing an increase in lead exposure and deaths among critically endangered California condors seems to fly in ...
Lead poisoning is rising in California condors despite years of protection. New research explains why the threat hasn’t gone ...
Disturbing increases in toxic lead exposure are linked to wider foraging by the critically endangered California condor and ...
Scientists say a pair of condors are likely tending to an egg high up in a California redwood — the first time that's happened there in more than a century. A Yurok wildlife official gives an update.
Tribal biologists in northern California say two critically endangered California condors could be tending an egg which would produce the region’s first fledgling in more than 100 years.
New research reveals why the endangered birds remain at risk years after California banned lead ammunition. Exclusive to KQED ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Optimism is soaring within the California Condor Recovery Program (CCRP) after the announcement on Wednesday that the Los Angeles ...
The Yurok Tribe says it believes a pair of condors released in 2022 have built the first nest in their ancestral lands in more than 100 years, and could be incubating their first egg.
Julie Sharp is a digital producer at CBS Los Angeles. She is a South Bay native and majored in print journalism at Cal State University Long Beach. Julie previously reported for the Beach Reporter, ...
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