Nebraskaland

Nebraskaland Jan-Feb 2022

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1439661

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January-February 2022 • Nebraskaland 31 Platte River Recovery Implementation Program. Those flights had documented 11 other whoopers on the Platte that day, including eight at the National Audubon Society's Lillian Annette Rowe Sanctuary near Gibbon and three more on Platte River Recovery Implementation Program property. That single day count of 57, repeated each day Nov. 3-8, was an all-time high on the Platte, topping the previous record of 35 from the spring of 2018 and smashing the previous fall record of 20 in 2019. The count was roughly 11 percent of the 506 birds in the migratory population that breeds at Wood Buffalo National Park in Canada and winters in Texas, following a 200-mile- wide migration route between those areas. A day earlier, the same group of 46 whoopers, representing every bird crews had spotted on the 20 miles of river between Shelton and Doniphan, were spotted in a nearby cornfield. Mallory Jaymes, a biologist who coordinates the survey flights for Headwaters, said the first whooping cranes to arrive in Nebraska on their southward migration this fall were A group of 46 whooping cranes, the largest ever recorded on the Platte River in central Nebraska, forage on the river downstream of the South Alda Road bridge, as a fl ock of sandhill cranes fl ies overhead on Nov. 7, 2021.

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