California condors confront bird flu in flight from extinction

The California condor is facing the deadliest strain of avian influenza in US history, and the outbreak could jeopardise the species decades after conservationists saved it from extinction.

Nine newly-hatched chicks, covered in downy white feathers, give condor-keepers at the Los Angeles Zoo hope that the endangered population of North America’s largest soaring land birds, which have a 10ft wingspan, will once again thrive after 40 years of effort.

With fewer than 350 condors in the wild – in flocks that span from the Pacific Northwest to Baja California, Mexico – the historic outbreak means ongoing breeding-in-captivity and re-wilding programmes like the one in LA Zoo remain essential.

Over the past year and a half, millions of birds across the US have died from avian flu, including more than 430 bald eagles and some 58 million turkeys and commercial chickens that were euthanised to prevent the spread of the disease.

Bird flu is further suspected in the deaths of dozens of seals off the coast of Maine last summer.

Already, the strain is believed to have caused the deaths of at least 22 California condors in Arizona, which were part of a flock in the US south-west that typically accounts for a third of the species’ entire wild population.

Experts are now concerned the strain could further impact condors by rapidly spreading across state lines through the spring migration.

More than two dozen environmental advocates this week urged the federal government to expedite approvals for a vaccine that would be given to both condors in the wild and in captivity.

The advocates, which include the Center for Biological Diversity, warned in a letter that the flu strain is “jeopardising the existence” of the famed bird.

California Condor
A California condor named Hope, a species ambassador, poses for a photo at the Los Angeles Zoo (AP)

As the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act approaches, wildlife officials say the species still cannot sustain itself without human intervention – even though humans are also to blame for much of its losses outside the avian flu, including deaths from lead ammunition poisoning.

“I think it’s going to take some changes in behaviour from the humans on the planet so that we can really address the threats to the species,” said Ashleigh Blackford, the California condor coordinator for the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Despite a California law banning it for hunting, lead ammunition is still readily used. The condors scavenge meat from dead animals, felled by the lead ammunition, and fall ill — often fatally.

“It’s really hard to watch a bird you raised come back and die in your arms,” said Los Angeles Zoo condor-keeper Chandra David, who has tended to lead-poisoned condors brought back to the zoo for treatment. “And there’s nothing we can do about it.”

California Condors
Debbie Sears, a condor keeper, feeds condor chick LA1123 at LA Zoo (AP)

“It’s a funny species in that it really is not your typical charismatic species, right? They are a little bit on the ugly side. Most people are not endeared to vultures, but this one in particular (is different),” Ashleigh Blackford said.

The population was nearly wiped out by hunting during the California Gold Rush, as well as poisoning from toxic pesticide DDT and lead ammunition.

In the 1980s, all 22 California condors left in the wild were controversially captured and put into captive breeding programmes to save the species.

Zoo-bred birds were first released into the wild in 1992 and in the years since have been reintroduced into habitats they had disappeared from — including the Yurok Tribe’s ancestral lands in Northern California. The ongoing re-wilding efforts are considered a conservation success.

Condor takes flight
Hope takes flight at the Condor habitat at the Los Angeles Zoo (AP)

The condor is intrinsically tied to several Native American tribes in the West. The Havasupai people, for example, say the condor flew their ancestors from the bottom of the Grand Canyon to the top – with its wings creating the famous striations.

For the Yurok Tribe, the work to bring the condors back highlights how Native Americans are reclaiming their traditional roles as stewards of the land – “which was a role that was taken from us forcibly post-contact,” said Tiana Williams-Claussen, director of the tribe’s wildlife department.

Known as prey-go-neesh in Yurok, the revered condor disappeared from the region in the late 1800s. In 2021, Williams-Claussen and her team, building on a promise made by tribal leaders in 2003, watched as captive-bred condors took flight over Yurok lands for the first time in more than a century.

The tribe hopes to release four to six captive-bred birds into the wild annually over the next two decades.

Ms Williams-Claussen said: “Ultimately our goal, of course, is to have birds without tags, without transmitters, that can just reintegrate into our ecosystem, into our cultural lifeways again.”

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