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A California condor hatched and raised at the Los Angeles Zoo has died from lead poisoning just months after being released into the wild, a Northern California native tribe has announced.
A cherished icon of the West, the prehistoric-looking California condor remains one of the world's most endangered species. North America's largest avian narrowly escaped extinction in the mid-1980s ...
It’s the first loss for the Northern California Condor Restoration Program. open image in gallery A photo of Pey-noh-pey-o-wok, a California condor that died after ingesting a lead pellet (Yurok ...
It’s another promising year to save critically endangered species, the Oregon said, after the first two California condor ...
The Yurok tribe’s Northern California Condor Restoration Program plays a key role in these efforts by reintroducing condors to the tribe’s ancestral homelands. The tribe considers the condors ...
The 18-month-old condor had only started flying in recent months. Officials say lead is a main threat to condors in the wild. HUMBOLDT COUNTY, Calif. - The Yurok Tribe of Northern California say ...
The Yurok tribe's Northern California Condor Restoration Program plays a key role in these efforts by reintroducing condors to the tribe's ancestral homelands. The tribe considers the condors to ...