The California condor
has been described as a bird
"with one wing in the grave."
Flying on wings nearly ten feet wide from tip to tip, these
birds thrived on the carcasses of animals like woolly mammoths.
Then, as humans began dramatically reshaping North America, the
continent's largest flying land bird started disappearing. By the
beginning of the twentieth century, extinction seemed
inevitable.
But small groups of passionate individuals refused to allow the
condor to fade away, even as they fought over how and why the bird
was to be saved. Scientists, farmers, developers, bird lovers, and
government bureaucrats argued bitterly and often, in the process
injuring one another and the species they were trying to save. In
the late 1980s, the federal government made a wrenching decision --
the last remaining wild condors would be caught and taken to a pair
of zoos, where they would be encouraged to breed with other captive
condors.
Livid critics called the plan a recipe for extinction. After the
zoo-based populations soared, the condors were released in the
mountains of south-central California, and then into the Grand
Canyon, Big Sur, and Baja California. Today the giant birds are
nowhere near extinct.
The giant bird with "one wing in the grave" appears to be
recovering, even as the wildlands it needs keep disappearing. But
the story of this bird is more than the story of a vulture with a
giant wingspan -- it is also the story of a wild and giant state
that has become crowded and small, and of the behind-the-scenes
dramas that have shaped the environmental movement. As told by John
Nielsen, an environmental journalist and a native Californian, this
is a fascinating tale of survival.
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