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 Metadata 
 Title: Whooping Cranes at Aransas NWR  
 Alternative Title: (none)  
 Creator: Hines, Robert W.  
 Source: WV-14-Centennial Historic CD 2 
 Publisher: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 
 Contributor: NATIONAL CONSERVATION TRAINING CENTER-PUBLICATIONS AND TRAINING MATERIALS 
 Language: EN - ENGLISH 
 Rights: (public domain) 
 Audience: (general) 
 Subject: Aransas, Refuge Centennial, bird, historic, endangered species, Texas
  
  Description 
 Abstract: Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, north of Corpus Christi, Texas, is one of the National Wildlife Refuge System’s premier units, in large part because of the role it has played in the recovery of the endangered whooping crane, a 5-foot-tall white bird symbolic of this Nation’s efforts to restore the populations of severely imperiled animals and plants. Reportedly extinct by 1923, the last remaining residual population of whooping cranes wintered here, along the Texas Gulf Coast, though no one knew where the birds went in summer (discovered in 1954 to be Canada’s remote Wood Buffalo National Park ??? a 2,600-mile annual migration). Aransas provided the seed population from which birds were bred in captivity to bolster the Texas population, as well as to undertake experimental populations established between Idaho and New Mexico, and a recent non-migratory population in Florida.  
  
  Date 
 Available: November 04 2002 
 Issued: November 04 2002 
 Modified: May 10 2004   |