Calgary Zoo whooping cranes set to be released into the wild in Louisiana - Action News
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Calgary Zoo whooping cranes set to be released into the wild in Louisiana

The Calgary Zoo's whooping crane captive breeding program has reached another milestone.

2 juvenile cranes getting acclimated with a cohort of 10 others at refuge on U.S. south coast

One of the rarest birds on the planet, two whooping cranes, like the one pictured above, were sent from the Calgary Zoo to a facility in Louisiana. (Calgary Zoo)

The Calgary Zoo's whooping crane captive breeding program has reached another milestone.

Two young whooping cranes hatched at the zoo's Devonian Wildlife Conservation Centreare about to be released into the wild in the southern United States.

The juvenile birds were sent to theAudubon Species Survival Centerin New Orleans. They're now at the Rockefeller Wildlife Refuge in southwest Louisiana,being acclimated to their new surroundings along with 10 other young cranes from Wisconsin and Maryland before they're all turned loose in coming weeks.

Another 11 juveniles from Wisconsinwere also brought to the White Lake Wetlands Conservation Area about 32 kilometresnorthearlier this month to begin a similar adaptation.

The 23 birds will remain in a large pen to protect them from predators. Other birds will be able to fly in and when they're ready, the cranes will fly out.

Valerie Edwards, a zookeeper in Calgary, says she's been getting updates since the two cranes arrivedand it seems so far things are going well.

"I was told that Sulu she's the younger of the two birds we sent down, she's a little femaleshe's a little smaller than the other birdsjust because she's one of the youngest in this particular cohort. But apparently she was the feistiest of them all," she said.

"She kind of came out of the crate, ready to go. So I think that's a great thing to hear because hopefully that helps her out in the long run when she's released."

The zoo also hatched two other whooping crane chicks this spring a male and a female which remain in Calgary.

The female will become part of the breeding program in a few years and keepers haven't determined if the male will be bred or if he'll go on display.

Whooping cranes are among the world's rarest bird.In 1944there were just 21 alive, a number that has grown to about600 today around 450 in the wild and about 150 in captivity.

Nearly 350 of the wild birds formthe only natural flock, which migrates between Canada and Texas.

The remaining 100are in a flock taught to migrate from Wisconsin to Florida by following ultralight planes.

Standing nearly six feet, they are the tallest flying bird in North America.