Nebraskaland

March 2026 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: https://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1544131

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30 Nebraskaland • March 2026 A sandhill crane banded and outfitted with a GPS unit in Nebraska ended up nesting south of the Bering Strait on the eastern trip of Russia, wintered in New Mexico and Texas, and is likely back in the Cornhusker State by now. The bird logged at least 11,000 miles. It was one of five fitted with GPS tracking bands last spring as part of a donor-funded study exploring what the cranes do during their annual stopover in the Platte River Valley. The study is led by the Crane Trust in partnership with the U.S. Geological Survey and the International Crane Foundation. Abe Kanz, director of science with the Crane Trust, said they want to know how far the cranes are traveling from the Platte River to feed. The long-running answer to that question, based on surveys done in the early 2000s, has been less than 5 miles. Aerial surveys by the Trust and others in recent years, however, have shown cranes going farther: One of the tracked cranes fed 10 miles from the Platte, Kanz said. Data collected during the study also should show how cranes' foraging patterns shift during the season. Cranes aren't the only birds eating leftover grain — primarily corn — in fields in the valley. Canada geese also feed on corn, as do snow geese, which arrive before the cranes and have become more abundant on the Platte as their migration patterns have shifted to the west. While most cranes only stop in Nebraska in the spring, more have been spending the fall and all or part of the winter on the river in recent years: The Trust counted an estimated 31,000 cranes in mid-December. "Is that something that's happening — depleting resources near the river? That could also contribute to needing to travel farther," Kanz said. Prior Crane Trust surveys have also shown the area used by cranes in the spring has shifted east, with more birds roosting on the Platte between U.S. Highway 34 and Chapman, including a record number last year. While the five birds were banded between Wood River and Grand Island last spring, two roosted and fed east Highway Crane Tracking Story and photos by Eric Fowler

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