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Sandhill crane

The sandhill crane (Antigone canadensis) is a species of large crane of North America and extreme northeastern Siberia. The common name of this bird refers to habitat like that at the Platte River, on the edge of Nebraska's Sandhills on the American Great Plains. Sandhill Cranes are known to hang out at the edges of bodies of water, especially in the Central Florida region. The central Platte River valley in Nebraska is the most important stopover area for the nominotypical subspecies, the lesser sandhill crane (A. c. canadensis), with up to 450,000 of these birds migrating through annually.[3][4]

Sandhill crane
Adult (front) and juvenile in Sarasota, Florida
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[2][note 1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Gruidae
Genus: Antigone
Species:
A. canadensis
Binomial name
Antigone canadensis
Subspecies
  • Antigone canadensis canadensis
    (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Antigone canadensis pratensis
    (F. A. A. Meyer, 1794)
  • Antigone canadensis nesiotes
    Bangs & Zappey, 1905
  • Antigone canadensis tabida
    (J. L. Peters, 1925)
  • Antigone canadensis rowani (disputed)
    Walkinshaw, 1965
  • Antigone canadensis pulla
    Aldrich, 1972

and see text

Synonyms
  • Ardea canadensis Linnaeus, 1758
  • Grus minor Miller, 1910
  • Grus proavus Marsh, 1872
  • Grus canadensis (Linnaeus, 1758)

and see text

Taxonomy Edit

In 1750, English naturalist George Edwards included an illustration and a description of the sandhill crane in the third volume of his A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. He used the English name "The Brown and Ash-colour'd Crane". Edwards based his hand-coloured etching on a preserved specimen that had been brought to London from the Hudson Bay area of Canada by James Isham.[5] When in 1758 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the tenth edition, he placed the sandhill crane with herons and cranes in the genus Ardea. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Ardea canadensis, and cited Edwards' work.[6]

The sandhill crane was formerly placed in the genus Grus, but a molecular phylogenetic study published in 2010 found that the genus, as then defined, was polyphyletic.[7] In the resulting rearrangement to create monophyletic genera, four species, including the sandhill crane, were placed in the resurrected genus Antigone that had originally been erected by the German naturalist Ludwig Reichenbach in 1853.[8][9]

The specific epithet canadensis is the modern Latin word for "from Canada".[10]

Five subspecies are recognised:[8]

  • A. c. canadensis (Linnaeus, 1758) – northeast Siberia through Alaska and north Canada to Baffin Island
  • A. c. tabida (Peters, JL, 1925) – south Canada and west, central United States
  • A. c. pratensis (Meyer, FAA, 1794) – Georgia and Florida
  • A. c. pulla (Aldrich, 1972) – Mississippi
  • A. c. nesiotes (Bangs & Zappey, 1905) – Cuba and Isla de la Juventud (Isle of Pines)

Description Edit

Adults are gray overall; during breeding, their plumage is usually much worn and stained, particularly in the migratory populations, and looks nearly ochre. The average weight of the larger males is 4.57 kg (10.1 lb), while the average weight of females is 4.02 kg (8.9 lb), with a range of 2.7 to 6.7 kg (6.0 to 14.8 lb) across the subspecies.[11][12] Sandhill cranes have red foreheads, white cheeks, and long, dark, pointed bills. In flight, their long, dark legs trail behind, and their long necks keep straight. Immature birds have reddish-brown upperparts and gray underparts.[13][14] The sexes look alike. Sizes vary among the different subspecies; the average height of these birds is around 80 to 136 cm (2 ft 7 in to 4 ft 6 in).[15][16] Their wing chords are typically 41.8–60 cm (16.5–23.6 in), tails are 10–26.4 cm (3.9–10.4 in), the exposed culmens are 6.9–16 cm (2.7–6.3 in) long, and the tarsi measure 15.5–26.6 cm (6.1–10.5 in).[17] Wingspan is 78.7 in (200 cm).[18]

These cranes frequently give a loud, trumpeting call that suggests a rolled "r" in the throat, and they can be heard from a long distance. Mated pairs of cranes engage in "unison calling". The cranes stand close together, calling in a synchronized and complex duet. The female makes two calls for every one from the male.

Sandhill cranes' large wingspans, typically 1.65 to 2.30 m (5 ft 5 in to 7 ft 7 in), make them very skilled soaring birds, similar in style to hawks and eagles.[16] Using thermals to obtain lift, they can stay aloft for many hours, requiring only occasional flapping of their wings, thus expending little energy. Migratory flocks contain hundreds of birds, and can create clear outlines of the normally invisible rising columns of air (thermals) they ride.

Sandhill cranes fly south for the winter. In their wintering areas, they form flocks over 10,000. One place this happens is at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, 100 mi (160 km) south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. An annual Sandhill Crane Festival is held there in November.

Fossil record Edit

Sandhill cranes have one of the longest fossil histories of any extant bird.[19] A 10-million-year-old crane fossil from Nebraska is said to be of this species,[20] but this may be from a prehistoric relative or ancestor of sandhill cranes, and not belong in the genus Grus. The oldest unequivocal sandhill crane fossil is 2.5 million years old,[21] older by half than the earliest remains of most living species of birds, primarily found from after the Pliocene/Pleistocene boundary some 1.8 million years ago. As these ancient sandhill cranes varied as much in size as present-day birds, those Pliocene fossils are sometimes described as new species.[22] Grus haydeni may have been a prehistoric relative, or it may comprise material of a sandhill crane and its ancestor.[23][24]

Subspecies and evolution Edit

 
Lesser sandhill crane (A. c. canadensis)
George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary, Ladner, British Columbia

Sandhill cranes vary considerably in size (much of which is clinal) and in migratory habits. A female of A. c. canadensis averages 3.46 kg (7.6 lb), 94 cm (37 in) in length, and has a wingspan of 1.6 m (5 ft 3 in). A male of A. c. tabida averages 5 kg (11 lb), 119 cm (47 in) in length, and has a wingspan of 2.12 m (6 ft 11 in). The southern subspecies (along with A. c. rowani) are intermediate, roughly according to Bergmann's rule.

Three subspecies are resident: A. c. pulla of the Gulf Coast of the U.S., A. c. pratensis of Florida and Georgia, and A. c. nesiotes of Cuba.[25] The northern populations exist as fragmented remains in the contiguous U.S. and a large and contiguous population from Canada to Beringia. These migrate to the Southwestern United States and Mexico. These cranes are rare vagrants to China, South Korea, and Japan and very rare vagrants to Western Europe.

Six subspecies have been recognized in recent times:

  • Lesser sandhill crane, A. c. canadensis
  • Cuban sandhill crane, A. c. nesiotesESA: endangered
  • Florida sandhill crane, A. c. pratensis
  • Mississippi sandhill crane, A. c. pulla – ESA: endangered
  • Canadian sandhill crane, A. c. rowani
  • Greater sandhill crane, A. c. tabida

The Florida sandhill crane was listed as EC or easily confused to facilitate an attempted reintroduction of the whooping crane (Grus americana) into Florida. The attempt failed, but the listing remained. The current list of endangered subspecies includes only two birds, A. c. nesiotes and A. c. rowani, with A. c. pratensis no longer listed.[26] Sandhill cranes occur in pastures, open prairies and freshwater wetlands in peninsular Florida from the Everglades to the Okefenokee Swamp.[27]

Some authorities[who?] no longer recognize Canadian sandhill crane as a distinct subspecies, as insignificant genetic differentiation and minimal morphological differentiation exist between it and greater sandhill crane. The others can be somewhat more reliably distinguished in hand by measurements and plumage details, apart from the size differences already mentioned. Unequivocal identification often requires location information, which is often impossible in migrating birds.

Analysis of control region mtDNA haplotype data shows two major lineages. The Arctic and the subarctic migratory population includes the lesser sandhill cranes. The other lineages can be divided into a migratory and some indistinct clusters which can be matched to the resident subspecies. The lesser and greater sandhill cranes are quite distinct, their divergence dating to roughly 2.3–1.2 million years ago , some time during the Late Pliocene or Early Pleistocene. Glaciation seemingly fragmented off a founder population of lesser sandhill cranes, because during each major ice age, its present breeding range was frozen year-round. Still, sandhill cranes are amply documented from fossil and subfossil remains right to the modern era.[24] Conceivably, they might be considered distinct species already, a monotypic G. canadensis and the greater sandhill crane, G. pratensis, which would include the other populations.[25]

The scant differences between southern Canadian and western U.S. populations appear to result from genetic drift, due to the recent reduction in population and range fragmentation. Until the early 20th century, the southern migratory birds occupied a much larger and continuous range. Thus, the subspecies A. c. rowani may well be abandoned.[25]

The two southern U.S. resident populations are somewhat more distinct. The Cuban population has been comparatively little studied, but appears to have been established on the island for a long time. They and the migratory greater sandhill cranes proper may form a group of lineages that diverged much later from a range in the southern U.S. and maybe northern Mexico, where they were resident. The southern migratory population would then represent a later re-expansion, which (re-)evolved their migratory habits independent from the northernmost birds, the geographically separated populations expanding rapidly when more habitat was available as the last ice age ended.[25]

Behavior Edit

Sandhill cranes are fairly social birds that usually live in pairs or family groups through the year. During migration and winter, unrelated cranes come together to form "survival groups" that forage and roost together. Such groups often congregate at migration and winter sites, sometimes in the thousands.

Diet Edit

Sandhill cranes are mainly herbivorous, but eat various types of food, depending on availability. They often feed with their bills down to the ground as they root around for seeds and other foods, in shallow wetlands with vegetation or various upland habitats. Cranes readily eat cultivated foods such as corn, wheat, cottonseed, and sorghum. Waste corn is useful to cranes preparing for migration, providing them with nutrients for the long journey.[28] Among northern races of sandhill cranes, their diet is most varied, especially among breeding birds. They variously feed on berries, small mammals, insects, snails, reptiles, and amphibians.[11]

Breeding Edit

Sandhill cranes raise one brood per year. In nonmigratory populations, laying begins between December and August. In migratory populations, laying usually begins in April or May. Both members of a breeding pair build the nest using plant material from the surrounding area. Nest sites are usually marshes, bogs, or swales, though occasionally on dry land. Females lay one to three (usually two) oval, dull brown eggs with reddish markings. Both parents incubate the eggs for about 30 days. The chicks are precocial; they hatch covered in down, with their eyes open, and able to leave the nest within a day. The parents brood the chicks for up to three weeks after hatching, feeding them intensively for the first few weeks, then gradually less frequently until they reach independence at 9 to 10 months old.[11]

The chicks remain with their parents until one to two months before the parents lay the next clutch of eggs the following year, remaining with them for 10–12 months. After leaving their parents, the chicks form nomadic flocks with other juveniles and nonbreeders. They remain in these flocks until they form breeding pairs between two and seven years old.[11]

Predators Edit

As a conspicuous ground-dwelling species, sandhill cranes are at risk from a few predators. Corvids, such as ravens and crows, gulls, jaegers, raptors and mammals such as foxes, coyotes and racoons feed on young cranes and eggs.[29] In Oregon and California, the most serious predators of chicks are reportedly coyotes, ravens, raccoons, American mink, and great horned owls, roughly in descending order.[30][31] Cranes of all ages can be hunted by both North American species of eagles, bobcats, and possibly American alligators.[32][33][34] Additionally, there is a report that even a much smaller peregrine falcon has successfully killed a 3.1 kg (6.8 lb) adult sandhill crane in a stoop.[29][35]

Sandhill cranes defend themselves and their young from aerial predators by jumping and kicking. Actively brooding adults are more likely to react aggressively to potential predators to defend their chicks than wintering birds, which most often normally try to evade attacks on foot or in flight.[36] For land predators such as dogs, foxes, and coyotes, they move forward, often hissing, with their wings open and bills pointed. If the predator persists, the crane stabs with its bill and kicks.[37] They can even kill predators by piercing through the skull with their sharp beak, and even coyotes can be killed.[11]

Status and conservation Edit

Mainland North America Edit

In the 1930s, sandhill cranes were generally extirpated east of the Mississippi River, but their populations have recovered, with an estimated 98,000 in the region in 2018, a substantial increase over the previous year.[38] Although sandhill cranes are not considered threatened as a species, the three southernmost subspecies are quite rare. Resident populations, not migratory birds, cannot choose secure breeding habitat. Many subpopulations were destroyed by hunting or habitat change. The greater sandhill crane proper initially suffered most; by 1940, probably fewer than 1,000 birds remained. Populations have since increased greatly again. At nearly 100,000, they are still fewer than the lesser sandhill crane, which, at about 400,000 individuals continent-wide, is the most plentiful extant crane.[25][39]

Some migratory populations of sandhill cranes face population threats due to interspecies competition with snow geese.[40] Since the 1990s, snow geese have eaten waste corn on which the cranes also rely prior to migration.[28] Sandhill crane populations are also threatened by hunting. Hunting cranes is legal throughout the states of the Central Flyway, from the Dakotas and Wyoming south to Oklahoma and Texas. Nebraska is the sole state along the Central Flyway where hunting cranes is illegal.[41] Despite losses from hunting, interspecies competition and other pressures such as habitat loss, the species has expanded its range. Since the early 2000s, the sandhill crane has expanded both its winter (nonbreeding) and breeding ranges northward, including into upstate New York.[42][43] In the 21st century, parts of the Midwestern United States have seen an extensive rebound of the species.[44]

The transplantation of wild birds and introduction of captive-reared birds into suitable low-population areas have been called viable management techniques.[45]

The Mississippi sandhill crane has lost the most range; it used to live along most of the northern Gulf of Mexico coast, and its range was once nearly parapatric with that of its eastern neighbor. As of 2013, about 25 breeding pairs exist in an intensively managed population. The Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge—established in 1975 when fewer than 35 of the birds existed—has the biggest release program for cranes on Earth, and 90% of the cranes there were raised in captivity.[46] The second viable egg from a two-egg nest was occasionally removed from the nests, starting in 1965, to become part of a captive flock. This breeding flock is divided between the Audubon Institute's Species Survival Center and White Oak Conservation in Yulee, Florida. These cranes have produced offspring for annual releases into the refuge.[47]

A Mississippi sandhill crane was the first bird to hatch from an egg fertilized by sperm that was thawed from a cryogenic state. This occurred at the Audubon Institute, as part of this subspecies' endangered species recovery plan.

In January 2019, 25 to 30 thousand cranes (both greater and lesser subspecies) were found wintering at the Whitewater Draw State Wildlife Area near McNeal in southeast Arizona.

Sandhill cranes have been tried as foster parents for whooping cranes in reintroduction schemes. This failed when the whooping cranes imprinted on their foster parents, later did not recognize other whooping cranes as their conspecifics, and unsuccessfully tried to pair with sandhill cranes, instead.

Cuba Edit

The Cuban sandhill crane (subspecies A. c. nesiotes) is not as rare as once believed and while it remains threatened its population is increasing.[48] Based on very limited information, up until the 1990s it was typically believed to consist of about 300 birds.[39] Detailed surveys conducted from 1994 to 2002 resulted in an estimate of about 525 individuals,[49] while surveys from 2004 to 2015 estimated that the population now was above 550. Subsequent reviews have placed the Cuban sandhill crane population at around 700 birds in 2017.[48] They inhabit dry or seasonally flooded grasslands and savannas, as well as nearby wetlands, and the remaining populations are divided into ten localities (it formerly occurred in two additional localities) in six provinces.[49] Based on the surveys from 1994 to 2002, six of the ten known localities each are home to less than 25 Cuban sandhill cranes; the last four each are home to more than 70. The two largest, one in the Zapata Swamp (c. 120 cranes) and another on Isla de la Juventud (c. 170 cranes), are increasing, whereas most other subpopulations appear to be stable, but some likely are too small for long-term survival and possibly are decreasing.[49] Subsequent surveys indicate that at least the four largest subpopulation now are larger than they were in the 1994–2002 surveys.[48]

Primary threats to Cuban sandhill cranes are habitat loss due to tree planting, spreading shrubs, expanding agriculture and fires, predation by non-native mammals (dogs, mongooses and feral pigs), and poaching. Population fragmentation is also a problem, as all remaining localities are separated by distances that are greater than the largest distances non-migratory sandhill cranes are known to move.[49]

Vagrancy Edit

Sandhill cranes occasionally reach Europe as vagrants. The first British record was on Fair Isle in April 1981,[50] and the second was in Shetland in 1991.[51] Small groups have also been seen in parts of eastern China[52] and Taiwan.[53] In 2022, reports emerged of regular sightings of sandhill cranes in New Brunswick, on the Atlantic coast of Canada.[54] The mythical Mothman, a humanoid creature reportedly seen in the Point Pleasant West Virginia area from November 1966 to December 1967 is thought to have originated from sightings of out-of-migration sandhill cranes.[55][56]

In popular culture Edit

In 2023 the “Mississippi sandhill crane” was featured on a United States Postal Service Forever stamp as part of the Endangered Species set, based on a photograph from Joel Sartore's Photo Ark. The stamp was dedicated at a ceremony at the National Grasslands Visitor Center in Wall, South Dakota.[57]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Antigone canadensis nesiotes and Antigone canadensis pulla are listed in CITES Appendix I

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2021). "Antigone canadensis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2021: e.T22692078A188597759. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2021-3.RLTS.T22692078A188597759.en. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  3. ^ "Lesser Sandhill Crane". kachemakbaybirders.org. 1 April 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2022.
  4. ^ "Sandhill Cranes". birdtrail.outdoornebraska.gov. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  5. ^ Edwards, George (1750). A Natural History of Uncommon Birds. Vol. Part III. London: Printed for the author at the College of Physicians. p. 133, Plate 133.
  6. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1758). Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (in Latin). Vol. 1 (10th ed.). Holmiae (Stockholm): Laurentii Salvii. p. 141.
  7. ^ Krajewski, C.; Sipiorski, J.T.; Anderson, F.E. (2010). "Mitochondrial genome sequences and the phylogeny of cranes (Gruiformes: Gruidae)". Auk. 127 (2): 440–452. doi:10.1525/auk.2009.09045. S2CID 85412892.
  8. ^ a b Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (July 2021). "Finfoots, flufftails, rails, trumpeters, cranes, Limpkin". IOC World Bird List Version 11.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  9. ^ Reichenbach, Ludwig (1853). Handbuch der speciellen Ornithologie. Vol. 1. Leipzig: Friedrich Hofmeister. p. xxiii.
  10. ^ Jobling, James A (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 87. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  11. ^ a b c d e Gerber, B. D., J. F. Dwyer, S. A. Nesbitt, R. C. Drewien, C. D. Littlefield, T. C. Tacha, and P. A. Vohs (2020). Sandhill Crane (Antigone canadensis), version 1.0. In Birds of the World (A. F. Poole, Editor). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA. https://doi.org/10.2173/bow.sancra.01
  12. ^ CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses, John B. Dunning Jr. (ed.). CRC Press (1992), ISBN 978-0-8493-4258-5.
  13. ^ Sandhill Crane. Allaboutbirds.org. Retrieved on 2012-12-30.
  14. ^ Sandhill Crane 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Seattleaudubon.org. Retrieved on 2012-12-30.
  15. ^ Sandhill Crane 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine, International Crane Foundation
  16. ^ a b Dunn, J.L. & Alderfer, J., editors. Field Guide to the Birds of North America. National Geographic, Washington, D.C.
  17. ^ Johnsgard, Paul A. (1983). Cranes of the World: Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis). University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  18. ^ "Sandhill Crane Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology". allaboutbirds.org. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  19. ^ Quantic, Diane Dufva; Hafen, P. Jane (2003): A Great Plains Reader. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3802-9 p. 84
  20. ^ The Nature Conservancy: Sandhill Crane 17 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2008-JAN-16.
  21. ^ Volz, Becky Lauren (2003): The Biogeography of the Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis) Archived 18 January 2008 at Wikiwix. Version of 2003-DEC-31.
  22. ^ Miller, Loye H. (1944). "Some Pliocene birds from Oregon and Idaho" (PDF). Condor. 46 (1): 25–32. doi:10.2307/1364248. JSTOR 1364248.
  23. ^ Miller, Alden H. & Sibley, Charles Gald (1942). "A New Species of Crane from the Pliocene of California" (PDF). Condor. 44 (3): 126–127. doi:10.2307/1364260. JSTOR 1364260.
  24. ^ a b Brodkorb, Pierce (1967). "Catalogue of Fossil Birds: Part 3 (Ralliformes, Ichthyornithiformes, Charadriiformes)". Bulletin of the Florida State Museum. 11 (3): 99–220.
  25. ^ a b c d e Rhymer, Judith M.; Fain, Matthew G.; Austin, Jane E.; Johnson, Douglas H. & Krajewski, Carey (2001). (PDF). Conservation Genetics. 2 (3): 203–218. doi:10.1023/A:1012203532300. S2CID 13628428. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
  26. ^ Species Report. fws.gov
  27. ^ "Sandhill Cranes". Florida Fish And Wildlife Conservation Commission. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  28. ^ a b Johnsgard PA. (2011) Sandhill and Whooping Cranes: Ancient Voices over America's Wetlands, University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln, ISBN 0803234961.
  29. ^ a b Walkinshaw, L. H. 1949. The Sandhill Cranes. Cranbrook Inst. Sci. Bull. 29. Bloomfield Hills, MI.
  30. ^ Littlefield, C. D., & Lindstedt, S. M. (1992). Survival of juvenile greater sandhill cranes at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Oregon.
  31. ^ Littlefield, C. D. (1995). "Sandhill crane nesting habitat, egg predators, and predator history on Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Oregon". Northwestern Naturalist, 137–143.
  32. ^ Caven, Andrew J., et al. "First description of a Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) actively depredating an adult Sandhill Crane (Antigone canadensis)." Western North American Naturalist 78.2 (2018): 216-220.
  33. ^ Ellis, David H., et al. "Golden eagle predation on experimental sandhill and whooping cranes." The Condor 101.3 (1999): 664-666.
  34. ^ Bennett, Alan J., and Laurel A. Bennett. "Survival rates and mortality factors of Florida sandhill cranes in Georgia." North American Bird Bander 15 (1990): 85-88.
  35. ^ Walkinshaw, L. H. 1973. Cranes of the world. Winchester Press, New York.
  36. ^ Drewien, R. C. (1973). Ecology of Rocky Mountain greater sandhill cranes.
  37. ^ Harris, M. (2000). "Grus canadensis". Animal Diversity Web. Animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu.
  38. ^ Schoenberg, Nara. "'The sandhills are coming!': Big, bugling cranes are returning to local skies, sparking spring fever in winter-weary Chicagoans". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  39. ^ a b Archibald, George W. & Meine, Curt (1996): 7. Sandhill Crane. In: Del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (eds.): Handbook of Birds of the World (Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks): 85, plate 5. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
  40. ^ Pearse AT; Krapu GL; Brandt DA; Kinzel PJ (2010). "Changes in Agriculture and Abundance of Snow Geese Affect Carrying Capacity of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska". Journal of Wildlife Management. 74 (3): 479–488. doi:10.2193/2008-539. S2CID 85089032.
  41. ^ "Status and harvests of Sandhill Cranes" (PDF). U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  42. ^ "113th CBC New York Regional Summary". National Audubon Society. 9 January 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  43. ^ "Sandhill Cranes Successfully Nest in the Adirondacks". Tupper Lake. 3 September 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  44. ^ O'Connell, Patrick M. "Sandhill cranes bounce back from brink as migration over Illinois to peak next week". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  45. ^ Stys, B. (1994): Ecology and habitat protection needs of Florida sandhill cranes on areas proposed for land conversion activities. Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission. Nongame Wildlife Program Technical Report No. 14. Tallahassee, FL.
  46. ^ "Mississippi Sandhill Crane". Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  47. ^ "Crane Population Management". Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge. Retrieved 21 June 2013.
  48. ^ a b c Caven, A.J. (28 February 2023). "An Updated Minimum Estimate of the Global Sandhill Crane Population". Platte River Natural Resource Reports Forthcoming. International Crane Foundation. doi:10.2139/ssrn.4373522. S2CID 257304092.
  49. ^ a b c d Gálvez-Aguilera, X.; Chavez-Ramirez, C. (2010). "Distribution, Abundance, and Status of Cuban Sandhill Cranes (Grus canadensis nesiotes)". Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 122 (3): 556–562. doi:10.1676/09-174.1. S2CID 86701226.
  50. ^ Riddiford, Nick (1983). "Sandhill Crane: new to Britain". British Birds. 76 (3): 105–109.
  51. ^ Ellis, Pete (1991). "The Sandhill Crane in Shetland". Birding World. 4 (9): 322–323.
  52. ^ . Xinhuanet. 12 February 2012. Archived from the original on 11 May 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  53. ^ "沙丘鶴迷航台灣 轟動鳥界". 人間福報. 6 February 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
  54. ^ "'Wow, what is that huge bird?' Sandhill crane spotted on Tantramar Marsh". CBC News. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  55. ^ "Monster Bird With Red Eyes May Be Crane". Gettysburg Times. Associated Press. 1 December 1966. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
  56. ^ Palma, Bethania (25 November 2016). "Mothman About Town". Snopes.com. Snopes. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  57. ^ "Postal Service Spotlights Endangered Species". United States Postal Service. 19 April 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023.

Further reading Edit

  • Meine, Curt D. & Archibald, George W. (eds.) (1996). . In: The cranes: Status survey and conservation action plan. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, U.K.

External links Edit

  • International Crane Foundation's Sandhill Crane page
  • at savingcranes.org
  • at Florida Museum of Natural History
  • Sandhill Crane Species Account – Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  • Sandhill Crane – Grus canadensis – USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
  • National Audubon Society, Rowe Sanctuary, Nebraska
  • Sandhill Crane Migration on Nebraska Platte River – Viewing Sites Info & Maps, Photos, Video
  • Alamosa/Monte Vista/Baca National Wildlife Refuge Complex 11 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge
  • "Sandhill crane media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Stamps (for Canada, Cuba) with Range Map at bird-stamps.com
  • Sandhill Crane Migrations Revealed by Satellites 2 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Documentary produced by Oregon Field Guide
  • Sandhill cranes breeding and biology in Alaska at christyyuncker.com
  • Sandhill crane photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Música de las Grullas: Una historia natural de las grullas de América (2014) by Paul Johnsgard, Enrique Weir, & Karine Gil-Weir

sandhill, crane, sandhill, crane, antigone, canadensis, species, large, crane, north, america, extreme, northeastern, siberia, common, name, this, bird, refers, habitat, like, that, platte, river, edge, nebraska, sandhills, american, great, plains, sandhill, c. The sandhill crane Antigone canadensis is a species of large crane of North America and extreme northeastern Siberia The common name of this bird refers to habitat like that at the Platte River on the edge of Nebraska s Sandhills on the American Great Plains Sandhill Cranes are known to hang out at the edges of bodies of water especially in the Central Florida region The central Platte River valley in Nebraska is the most important stopover area for the nominotypical subspecies the lesser sandhill crane A c canadensis with up to 450 000 of these birds migrating through annually 3 4 Sandhill craneAdult front and juvenile in Sarasota FloridaConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 2 note 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder GruiformesFamily GruidaeGenus AntigoneSpecies A canadensisBinomial nameAntigone canadensis Linnaeus 1758 SubspeciesAntigone canadensis canadensis Linnaeus 1758 Antigone canadensis pratensis F A A Meyer 1794 Antigone canadensis nesiotesBangs amp Zappey 1905 Antigone canadensis tabida J L Peters 1925 Antigone canadensis rowani disputed Walkinshaw 1965 Antigone canadensis pullaAldrich 1972and see textSynonymsArdea canadensis Linnaeus 1758 Grus minor Miller 1910 Grus proavus Marsh 1872 Grus canadensis Linnaeus 1758 and see textAntigone canadensis source source USFWS Recording Problems playing this file See media help Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Fossil record 2 2 Subspecies and evolution 3 Behavior 3 1 Diet 3 2 Breeding 3 3 Predators 4 Status and conservation 4 1 Mainland North America 4 2 Cuba 4 3 Vagrancy 5 In popular culture 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy EditIn 1750 English naturalist George Edwards included an illustration and a description of the sandhill crane in the third volume of his A Natural History of Uncommon Birds He used the English name The Brown and Ash colour d Crane Edwards based his hand coloured etching on a preserved specimen that had been brought to London from the Hudson Bay area of Canada by James Isham 5 When in 1758 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the tenth edition he placed the sandhill crane with herons and cranes in the genus Ardea Linnaeus included a brief description coined the binomial name Ardea canadensis and cited Edwards work 6 The sandhill crane was formerly placed in the genus Grus but a molecular phylogenetic study published in 2010 found that the genus as then defined was polyphyletic 7 In the resulting rearrangement to create monophyletic genera four species including the sandhill crane were placed in the resurrected genus Antigone that had originally been erected by the German naturalist Ludwig Reichenbach in 1853 8 9 The specific epithet canadensis is the modern Latin word for from Canada 10 Five subspecies are recognised 8 A c canadensis Linnaeus 1758 northeast Siberia through Alaska and north Canada to Baffin Island A c tabida Peters JL 1925 south Canada and west central United States A c pratensis Meyer FAA 1794 Georgia and Florida A c pulla Aldrich 1972 Mississippi A c nesiotes Bangs amp Zappey 1905 Cuba and Isla de la Juventud Isle of Pines Description EditAdults are gray overall during breeding their plumage is usually much worn and stained particularly in the migratory populations and looks nearly ochre The average weight of the larger males is 4 57 kg 10 1 lb while the average weight of females is 4 02 kg 8 9 lb with a range of 2 7 to 6 7 kg 6 0 to 14 8 lb across the subspecies 11 12 Sandhill cranes have red foreheads white cheeks and long dark pointed bills In flight their long dark legs trail behind and their long necks keep straight Immature birds have reddish brown upperparts and gray underparts 13 14 The sexes look alike Sizes vary among the different subspecies the average height of these birds is around 80 to 136 cm 2 ft 7 in to 4 ft 6 in 15 16 Their wing chords are typically 41 8 60 cm 16 5 23 6 in tails are 10 26 4 cm 3 9 10 4 in the exposed culmens are 6 9 16 cm 2 7 6 3 in long and the tarsi measure 15 5 26 6 cm 6 1 10 5 in 17 Wingspan is 78 7 in 200 cm 18 These cranes frequently give a loud trumpeting call that suggests a rolled r in the throat and they can be heard from a long distance Mated pairs of cranes engage in unison calling The cranes stand close together calling in a synchronized and complex duet The female makes two calls for every one from the male Sandhill cranes large wingspans typically 1 65 to 2 30 m 5 ft 5 in to 7 ft 7 in make them very skilled soaring birds similar in style to hawks and eagles 16 Using thermals to obtain lift they can stay aloft for many hours requiring only occasional flapping of their wings thus expending little energy Migratory flocks contain hundreds of birds and can create clear outlines of the normally invisible rising columns of air thermals they ride Sandhill cranes fly south for the winter In their wintering areas they form flocks over 10 000 One place this happens is at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge 100 mi 160 km south of Albuquerque New Mexico An annual Sandhill Crane Festival is held there in November nbsp Sandhill crane in flight at the Llano Seco Unit of the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Complex California USA nbsp An immature Florida sandhill crane walks along the shore of Lake Cecile near Kissimmee Florida nbsp Sandhill crane in flight at the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge nbsp Two Florida sandhill cranes at a gas station near Cape Canaveral FloridaFossil record Edit Sandhill cranes have one of the longest fossil histories of any extant bird 19 A 10 million year old crane fossil from Nebraska is said to be of this species 20 but this may be from a prehistoric relative or ancestor of sandhill cranes and not belong in the genus Grus The oldest unequivocal sandhill crane fossil is 2 5 million years old 21 older by half than the earliest remains of most living species of birds primarily found from after the Pliocene Pleistocene boundary some 1 8 million years ago As these ancient sandhill cranes varied as much in size as present day birds those Pliocene fossils are sometimes described as new species 22 Grus haydeni may have been a prehistoric relative or it may comprise material of a sandhill crane and its ancestor 23 24 Subspecies and evolution Edit nbsp Lesser sandhill crane A c canadensis George C Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary Ladner British ColumbiaSandhill cranes vary considerably in size much of which is clinal and in migratory habits A female of A c canadensis averages 3 46 kg 7 6 lb 94 cm 37 in in length and has a wingspan of 1 6 m 5 ft 3 in A male of A c tabida averages 5 kg 11 lb 119 cm 47 in in length and has a wingspan of 2 12 m 6 ft 11 in The southern subspecies along with A c rowani are intermediate roughly according to Bergmann s rule Three subspecies are resident A c pulla of the Gulf Coast of the U S A c pratensis of Florida and Georgia and A c nesiotes of Cuba 25 The northern populations exist as fragmented remains in the contiguous U S and a large and contiguous population from Canada to Beringia These migrate to the Southwestern United States and Mexico These cranes are rare vagrants to China South Korea and Japan and very rare vagrants to Western Europe Six subspecies have been recognized in recent times Lesser sandhill crane A c canadensis Cuban sandhill crane A c nesiotes ESA endangered Florida sandhill crane A c pratensis Mississippi sandhill crane A c pulla ESA endangered Canadian sandhill crane A c rowani Greater sandhill crane A c tabidaThe Florida sandhill crane was listed as EC or easily confused to facilitate an attempted reintroduction of the whooping crane Grus americana into Florida The attempt failed but the listing remained The current list of endangered subspecies includes only two birds A c nesiotes and A c rowani with A c pratensis no longer listed 26 Sandhill cranes occur in pastures open prairies and freshwater wetlands in peninsular Florida from the Everglades to the Okefenokee Swamp 27 Some authorities who no longer recognize Canadian sandhill crane as a distinct subspecies as insignificant genetic differentiation and minimal morphological differentiation exist between it and greater sandhill crane The others can be somewhat more reliably distinguished in hand by measurements and plumage details apart from the size differences already mentioned Unequivocal identification often requires location information which is often impossible in migrating birds Analysis of control region mtDNA haplotype data shows two major lineages The Arctic and the subarctic migratory population includes the lesser sandhill cranes The other lineages can be divided into a migratory and some indistinct clusters which can be matched to the resident subspecies The lesser and greater sandhill cranes are quite distinct their divergence dating to roughly 2 3 1 2 million years ago some time during the Late Pliocene or Early Pleistocene Glaciation seemingly fragmented off a founder population of lesser sandhill cranes because during each major ice age its present breeding range was frozen year round Still sandhill cranes are amply documented from fossil and subfossil remains right to the modern era 24 Conceivably they might be considered distinct species already a monotypic G canadensis and the greater sandhill crane G pratensis which would include the other populations 25 The scant differences between southern Canadian and western U S populations appear to result from genetic drift due to the recent reduction in population and range fragmentation Until the early 20th century the southern migratory birds occupied a much larger and continuous range Thus the subspecies A c rowani may well be abandoned 25 The two southern U S resident populations are somewhat more distinct The Cuban population has been comparatively little studied but appears to have been established on the island for a long time They and the migratory greater sandhill cranes proper may form a group of lineages that diverged much later from a range in the southern U S and maybe northern Mexico where they were resident The southern migratory population would then represent a later re expansion which re evolved their migratory habits independent from the northernmost birds the geographically separated populations expanding rapidly when more habitat was available as the last ice age ended 25 Behavior EditSandhill cranes are fairly social birds that usually live in pairs or family groups through the year During migration and winter unrelated cranes come together to form survival groups that forage and roost together Such groups often congregate at migration and winter sites sometimes in the thousands Diet Edit Sandhill cranes are mainly herbivorous but eat various types of food depending on availability They often feed with their bills down to the ground as they root around for seeds and other foods in shallow wetlands with vegetation or various upland habitats Cranes readily eat cultivated foods such as corn wheat cottonseed and sorghum Waste corn is useful to cranes preparing for migration providing them with nutrients for the long journey 28 Among northern races of sandhill cranes their diet is most varied especially among breeding birds They variously feed on berries small mammals insects snails reptiles and amphibians 11 Breeding Edit Sandhill cranes raise one brood per year In nonmigratory populations laying begins between December and August In migratory populations laying usually begins in April or May Both members of a breeding pair build the nest using plant material from the surrounding area Nest sites are usually marshes bogs or swales though occasionally on dry land Females lay one to three usually two oval dull brown eggs with reddish markings Both parents incubate the eggs for about 30 days The chicks are precocial they hatch covered in down with their eyes open and able to leave the nest within a day The parents brood the chicks for up to three weeks after hatching feeding them intensively for the first few weeks then gradually less frequently until they reach independence at 9 to 10 months old 11 The chicks remain with their parents until one to two months before the parents lay the next clutch of eggs the following year remaining with them for 10 12 months After leaving their parents the chicks form nomadic flocks with other juveniles and nonbreeders They remain in these flocks until they form breeding pairs between two and seven years old 11 Predators Edit As a conspicuous ground dwelling species sandhill cranes are at risk from a few predators Corvids such as ravens and crows gulls jaegers raptors and mammals such as foxes coyotes and racoons feed on young cranes and eggs 29 In Oregon and California the most serious predators of chicks are reportedly coyotes ravens raccoons American mink and great horned owls roughly in descending order 30 31 Cranes of all ages can be hunted by both North American species of eagles bobcats and possibly American alligators 32 33 34 Additionally there is a report that even a much smaller peregrine falcon has successfully killed a 3 1 kg 6 8 lb adult sandhill crane in a stoop 29 35 Sandhill cranes defend themselves and their young from aerial predators by jumping and kicking Actively brooding adults are more likely to react aggressively to potential predators to defend their chicks than wintering birds which most often normally try to evade attacks on foot or in flight 36 For land predators such as dogs foxes and coyotes they move forward often hissing with their wings open and bills pointed If the predator persists the crane stabs with its bill and kicks 37 They can even kill predators by piercing through the skull with their sharp beak and even coyotes can be killed 11 source source source source A huge flock at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge New Mexico nbsp A baby Mississippi sandhill crane is weighed at White Oak Conservation nbsp A human feeding a sandhill crane a docile and gentle birdStatus and conservation EditMainland North America Edit In the 1930s sandhill cranes were generally extirpated east of the Mississippi River but their populations have recovered with an estimated 98 000 in the region in 2018 a substantial increase over the previous year 38 Although sandhill cranes are not considered threatened as a species the three southernmost subspecies are quite rare Resident populations not migratory birds cannot choose secure breeding habitat Many subpopulations were destroyed by hunting or habitat change The greater sandhill crane proper initially suffered most by 1940 probably fewer than 1 000 birds remained Populations have since increased greatly again At nearly 100 000 they are still fewer than the lesser sandhill crane which at about 400 000 individuals continent wide is the most plentiful extant crane 25 39 Some migratory populations of sandhill cranes face population threats due to interspecies competition with snow geese 40 Since the 1990s snow geese have eaten waste corn on which the cranes also rely prior to migration 28 Sandhill crane populations are also threatened by hunting Hunting cranes is legal throughout the states of the Central Flyway from the Dakotas and Wyoming south to Oklahoma and Texas Nebraska is the sole state along the Central Flyway where hunting cranes is illegal 41 Despite losses from hunting interspecies competition and other pressures such as habitat loss the species has expanded its range Since the early 2000s the sandhill crane has expanded both its winter nonbreeding and breeding ranges northward including into upstate New York 42 43 In the 21st century parts of the Midwestern United States have seen an extensive rebound of the species 44 The transplantation of wild birds and introduction of captive reared birds into suitable low population areas have been called viable management techniques 45 The Mississippi sandhill crane has lost the most range it used to live along most of the northern Gulf of Mexico coast and its range was once nearly parapatric with that of its eastern neighbor As of 2013 about 25 breeding pairs exist in an intensively managed population The Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge established in 1975 when fewer than 35 of the birds existed has the biggest release program for cranes on Earth and 90 of the cranes there were raised in captivity 46 The second viable egg from a two egg nest was occasionally removed from the nests starting in 1965 to become part of a captive flock This breeding flock is divided between the Audubon Institute s Species Survival Center and White Oak Conservation in Yulee Florida These cranes have produced offspring for annual releases into the refuge 47 A Mississippi sandhill crane was the first bird to hatch from an egg fertilized by sperm that was thawed from a cryogenic state This occurred at the Audubon Institute as part of this subspecies endangered species recovery plan In January 2019 25 to 30 thousand cranes both greater and lesser subspecies were found wintering at the Whitewater Draw State Wildlife Area near McNeal in southeast Arizona Sandhill cranes have been tried as foster parents for whooping cranes in reintroduction schemes This failed when the whooping cranes imprinted on their foster parents later did not recognize other whooping cranes as their conspecifics and unsuccessfully tried to pair with sandhill cranes instead nbsp Florida sandhill crane Ocala National Forest nbsp Sandhill crane at Jonathan Dickinson State Park Florida nbsp In British Columbia CanadaCuba Edit The Cuban sandhill crane subspecies A c nesiotes is not as rare as once believed and while it remains threatened its population is increasing 48 Based on very limited information up until the 1990s it was typically believed to consist of about 300 birds 39 Detailed surveys conducted from 1994 to 2002 resulted in an estimate of about 525 individuals 49 while surveys from 2004 to 2015 estimated that the population now was above 550 Subsequent reviews have placed the Cuban sandhill crane population at around 700 birds in 2017 48 They inhabit dry or seasonally flooded grasslands and savannas as well as nearby wetlands and the remaining populations are divided into ten localities it formerly occurred in two additional localities in six provinces 49 Based on the surveys from 1994 to 2002 six of the ten known localities each are home to less than 25 Cuban sandhill cranes the last four each are home to more than 70 The two largest one in the Zapata Swamp c 120 cranes and another on Isla de la Juventud c 170 cranes are increasing whereas most other subpopulations appear to be stable but some likely are too small for long term survival and possibly are decreasing 49 Subsequent surveys indicate that at least the four largest subpopulation now are larger than they were in the 1994 2002 surveys 48 Primary threats to Cuban sandhill cranes are habitat loss due to tree planting spreading shrubs expanding agriculture and fires predation by non native mammals dogs mongooses and feral pigs and poaching Population fragmentation is also a problem as all remaining localities are separated by distances that are greater than the largest distances non migratory sandhill cranes are known to move 49 Vagrancy Edit See also Cranes in Britain Sandhill cranes occasionally reach Europe as vagrants The first British record was on Fair Isle in April 1981 50 and the second was in Shetland in 1991 51 Small groups have also been seen in parts of eastern China 52 and Taiwan 53 In 2022 reports emerged of regular sightings of sandhill cranes in New Brunswick on the Atlantic coast of Canada 54 The mythical Mothman a humanoid creature reportedly seen in the Point Pleasant West Virginia area from November 1966 to December 1967 is thought to have originated from sightings of out of migration sandhill cranes 55 56 In popular culture EditIn 2023 the Mississippi sandhill crane was featured on a United States Postal Service Forever stamp as part of the Endangered Species set based on a photograph from Joel Sartore s Photo Ark The stamp was dedicated at a ceremony at the National Grasslands Visitor Center in Wall South Dakota 57 Notes Edit Antigone canadensis nesiotes and Antigone canadensis pulla are listed in CITES Appendix ISee also EditGrulla National Wildlife Refuge Muleshoe National Wildlife RefugeReferences Edit BirdLife International 2021 Antigone canadensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2021 e T22692078A188597759 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2021 3 RLTS T22692078A188597759 en Retrieved 3 January 2023 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 14 January 2022 Lesser Sandhill Crane kachemakbaybirders org 1 April 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2022 Sandhill Cranes birdtrail outdoornebraska gov Retrieved 18 April 2023 Edwards George 1750 A Natural History of Uncommon Birds Vol Part III London Printed for the author at the College of Physicians p 133 Plate 133 Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 10th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 141 Krajewski C Sipiorski J T Anderson F E 2010 Mitochondrial genome sequences and the phylogeny of cranes Gruiformes Gruidae Auk 127 2 440 452 doi 10 1525 auk 2009 09045 S2CID 85412892 a b Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds July 2021 Finfoots flufftails rails trumpeters cranes Limpkin IOC World Bird List Version 11 2 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 14 October 2021 Reichenbach Ludwig 1853 Handbuch der speciellen Ornithologie Vol 1 Leipzig Friedrich Hofmeister p xxiii Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 87 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 a b c d e Gerber B D J F Dwyer S A Nesbitt R C Drewien C D Littlefield T C Tacha and P A Vohs 2020 Sandhill Crane Antigone canadensis version 1 0 In Birds of the World A F Poole Editor Cornell Lab of Ornithology Ithaca NY USA https doi org 10 2173 bow sancra 01 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses John B Dunning Jr ed CRC Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8493 4258 5 Sandhill Crane Allaboutbirds org Retrieved on 2012 12 30 Sandhill Crane Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Seattleaudubon org Retrieved on 2012 12 30 Sandhill Crane Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine International Crane Foundation a b Dunn J L amp Alderfer J editors Field Guide to the Birds of North America National Geographic Washington D C Johnsgard Paul A 1983 Cranes of the World Sandhill Crane Grus canadensis University of Nebraska Lincoln Sandhill Crane Identification All About Birds Cornell Lab of Ornithology allaboutbirds org Retrieved 30 September 2020 Quantic Diane Dufva Hafen P Jane 2003 A Great Plains Reader University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3802 9 p 84 The Nature Conservancy Sandhill Crane Archived 17 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2008 JAN 16 Volz Becky Lauren 2003 The Biogeography of the Sandhill Crane Grus canadensis Archived 18 January 2008 at Wikiwix Version of 2003 DEC 31 Miller Loye H 1944 Some Pliocene birds from Oregon and Idaho PDF Condor 46 1 25 32 doi 10 2307 1364248 JSTOR 1364248 Miller Alden H amp Sibley Charles Gald 1942 A New Species of Crane from the Pliocene of California PDF Condor 44 3 126 127 doi 10 2307 1364260 JSTOR 1364260 a b Brodkorb Pierce 1967 Catalogue of Fossil Birds Part 3 Ralliformes Ichthyornithiformes Charadriiformes Bulletin of the Florida State Museum 11 3 99 220 a b c d e Rhymer Judith M Fain Matthew G Austin Jane E Johnson Douglas H amp Krajewski Carey 2001 Mitochondrial phylogeography subspecific taxonomy and conservation genetics of sandhill cranes Grus canadensis Aves Gruidae PDF Conservation Genetics 2 3 203 218 doi 10 1023 A 1012203532300 S2CID 13628428 Archived from the original PDF on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2018 Species Report fws gov Sandhill Cranes Florida Fish And Wildlife Conservation Commission Retrieved 14 June 2019 a b Johnsgard PA 2011 Sandhill and Whooping Cranes Ancient Voices over America s Wetlands University of Nebraska Press Lincoln ISBN 0803234961 a b Walkinshaw L H 1949 The Sandhill Cranes Cranbrook Inst Sci Bull 29 Bloomfield Hills MI Littlefield C D amp Lindstedt S M 1992 Survival of juvenile greater sandhill cranes at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge Oregon Littlefield C D 1995 Sandhill crane nesting habitat egg predators and predator history on Malheur National Wildlife Refuge Oregon Northwestern Naturalist 137 143 Caven Andrew J et al First description of a Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus actively depredating an adult Sandhill Crane Antigone canadensis Western North American Naturalist 78 2 2018 216 220 Ellis David H et al Golden eagle predation on experimental sandhill and whooping cranes The Condor 101 3 1999 664 666 Bennett Alan J and Laurel A Bennett Survival rates and mortality factors of Florida sandhill cranes in Georgia North American Bird Bander 15 1990 85 88 Walkinshaw L H 1973 Cranes of the world Winchester Press New York Drewien R C 1973 Ecology of Rocky Mountain greater sandhill cranes Harris M 2000 Grus canadensis Animal Diversity Web Animaldiversity ummz umich edu Schoenberg Nara The sandhills are coming Big bugling cranes are returning to local skies sparking spring fever in winter weary Chicagoans Chicago Tribune Retrieved 10 March 2020 a b Archibald George W amp Meine Curt 1996 7 Sandhill Crane In Del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew amp Sargatal Jordi eds Handbook of Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzin to Auks 85 plate 5 Lynx Edicions Barcelona ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Pearse AT Krapu GL Brandt DA Kinzel PJ 2010 Changes in Agriculture and Abundance of Snow Geese Affect Carrying Capacity of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska Journal of Wildlife Management 74 3 479 488 doi 10 2193 2008 539 S2CID 85089032 Status and harvests of Sandhill Cranes PDF U S Fish amp Wildlife Service Retrieved 2 September 2019 113th CBC New York Regional Summary National Audubon Society 9 January 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Sandhill Cranes Successfully Nest in the Adirondacks Tupper Lake 3 September 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2017 O Connell Patrick M Sandhill cranes bounce back from brink as migration over Illinois to peak next week chicagotribune com Retrieved 21 November 2017 Stys B 1994 Ecology and habitat protection needs of Florida sandhill cranes on areas proposed for land conversion activities Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission Nongame Wildlife Program Technical Report No 14 Tallahassee FL Mississippi Sandhill Crane Retrieved 21 June 2013 Crane Population Management Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge Retrieved 21 June 2013 a b c Caven A J 28 February 2023 An Updated Minimum Estimate of the Global Sandhill Crane Population Platte River Natural Resource Reports Forthcoming International Crane Foundation doi 10 2139 ssrn 4373522 S2CID 257304092 a b c d Galvez Aguilera X Chavez Ramirez C 2010 Distribution Abundance and Status of Cuban Sandhill Cranes Grus canadensis nesiotes Wilson Journal of Ornithology 122 3 556 562 doi 10 1676 09 174 1 S2CID 86701226 Riddiford Nick 1983 Sandhill Crane new to Britain British Birds 76 3 105 109 Ellis Pete 1991 The Sandhill Crane in Shetland Birding World 4 9 322 323 Sandhill cranes seen in E China s Jiangsu Xinhuanet 12 February 2012 Archived from the original on 11 May 2014 Retrieved 18 May 2013 沙丘鶴迷航台灣 轟動鳥界 人間福報 6 February 2020 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Wow what is that huge bird Sandhill crane spotted on Tantramar Marsh CBC News Retrieved 25 April 2022 Monster Bird With Red Eyes May Be Crane Gettysburg Times Associated Press 1 December 1966 Retrieved 21 August 2011 Palma Bethania 25 November 2016 Mothman About Town Snopes com Snopes Retrieved 18 January 2017 Postal Service Spotlights Endangered Species United States Postal Service 19 April 2023 Retrieved 11 May 2023 Further reading EditMeine Curt D amp Archibald George W eds 1996 Sandhill Crane Grus canadensis In The cranes Status survey and conservation action plan IUCN Gland Switzerland and Cambridge U K External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sandhill crane nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Grus canadensis nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Sand hill Crane International Crane Foundation s Sandhill Crane page Audio file of cranes unison calling at savingcranes org Sandhill Crane Bird Sound at Florida Museum of Natural History Sandhill Crane Species Account Cornell Lab of Ornithology Sandhill Crane Grus canadensis USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter The Nature Conservancy s Species Profile Sandhill Crane National Audubon Society Rowe Sanctuary Nebraska Sandhill Crane Migration on Nebraska Platte River Viewing Sites Info amp Maps Photos Video Alamosa Monte Vista Baca National Wildlife Refuge Complex Archived 11 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge Sandhill crane media Internet Bird Collection Stamps for Canada Cuba with Range Map at bird stamps com Sandhill Crane Migrations Revealed by Satellites Archived 2 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Documentary produced by Oregon Field Guide Sandhill cranes breeding and biology in Alaska at christyyuncker com Sandhill crane photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Musica de las Grullas Una historia natural de las grullas de America 2014 by Paul Johnsgard Enrique Weir amp Karine Gil Weir Portal nbsp Birds Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandhill crane amp oldid 1179286940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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