Nebraskaland

March 2024 Nebraskaland

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/1516697

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March 2024 • Nebraskaland 29 the word sleep, because when I think of the human form of sleep, where we are literally zonked out and dreaming, I don't know if cranes do that," Lacy said, noting she prefers to use words like resting and loafi ng to describe the behavior. "They might rest, but I think it's more of shutting down half of their brain because the littlest noise and, 'Boom!' they're awake and aware." Lacy visits the Platte each spring and has watched from bank blinds in the evening and early morning hours as birds roost in the river. In the dark, she said, those birds are always on alert, and she wonders if those with their heads tucked under their wings might be doing so more to conserve body heat than rest. "But when they go out in the morning and fi nd their foraging fi elds, they'll get a bite to eat, and then they will fi nd a place to loaf and/or 'sleep'," Lacy said. "The predators that try to make snacks out of a crane are more active at night than during the day, so they can aff ord to shut down a little bit more during the day. And they're usually in a crowd of their compatriots, and if somebody twitches, by god, nobody is looking around saying, 'Hey, what's going on?' They're all up in the air, and they're gone. There's always that situational awareness, even though their head is tucked and they're on the ground and their eyes might even be closed." All is Well Cranes were likely using this stretch of the stream creek long before Forsberg photographed them there. Helzer can't say for sure if they are using it more since the habitat was improved, but he would like to think so. He sees birds in other places he was told he wouldn't when he started working in the valley 30 years ago, including prairies where their heads barely rise above the tall grass. He was happy to learn cranes using this woodland stream wasn't as odd as he initially thought, and that they could stand up much quicker than what he had seen were a bobcat or coyote to jump into the fray. "That makes me feel better," he said. N After weeks of hosting cranes, grass in the creekbottom was littered with feathers and down.

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