Condor chick born in wild flies from nest at California park


              This June 14, 2016, photo provided by the National Park Service shows condor chick 828 in her nest at 60 days of age in Pinnacles National Park near Paicines, Calif. The California condor chick has hatched in the wild, survived and flown out of its nest at Pinnacles National Park for the first time since the 1890s, officials said Wednesday, Oct 12, 2016. (Gavin Emmons/National Park Service via AP)
This June 14, 2016, photo provided by the National Park Service shows condor chick 828 in her nest at 60 days of age in Pinnacles National Park near Paicines, Calif. The California condor chick has hatched in the wild, survived and flown out of its nest at Pinnacles National Park for the first time since the 1890s, officials said Wednesday, Oct 12, 2016. (Gavin Emmons/National Park Service via AP)

PAICINES, Calif. (AP) - A California condor chick has hatched in the wild, survived and flown out of its nest at Pinnacles National Park for the first time since the 1890s, officials said Wednesday.

The Santa Cruz Sentinel (http://bit.ly/2edTCWs ) reports the female bird, born in April, is not the first chick to be born in the park. But it is the first to survive long enough to leave the nest and begin its flight to adulthood.

"She is staying near the nest, doing lot of practice flights," said Rachel Wolstenholme, condor program manager at Pinnacles. "Her parents will help her learn how to fly and where to feed and how to interact with the other wild birds out there."

Pinnacles is a 26,000-acre park in rural San Benito County about 80 miles south of San Jose.

Scientists say it's a success story for North America's largest bird as it continues a slow but steady path from near extinction.

California condors once ranged from British Columbia to Mexico. Habitat loss, hunting and lead poisoning from ingesting buckshot while feeding on dead animals shot by farmers and hunters led to a massive population dwindle.

In 1987, federal biologists captured all remaining wild condors and began breeding them in zoos. The birds' offspring have been gradually released back into the wild.

Things are now improving for the condor.

As of Dec. 31, there were 435 California condors living in zoos and in the wild, an increase of nearly twentyfold over the past 30 years, the newspaper reported.

Condors have successfully been born in the wild, and left the nest, a process known as fledging, in California's Big Sur; Southern California; Arizona; Utah and Baja Mexico. But until last week, it hadn't happened at Pinnacles in 120 years. Park officials are keeping the location of the nest a secret so visitors don't disturb the birds.

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Information from: Santa Cruz Sentinel, http://www.santacruzsentinel.com

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