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Editorial: Editorial: Freedom to Blow the Whistle
June 23rd, 2011

Editorial: Guest Editorial: Never Forget
May 5th, 2011

Editorial: Editorial: "The Most Unforgiving Technology in Human History"
April 23rd, 2011

Editorial: Editorial: Rumors
March 20th, 2011

Editorial: Editorial: Henry Ford, American Genius
January 21st, 2011

Editorial: Editorial: Remember the Needy in Our Community
December 26th, 2010

Editorial: Guest Editorial: Prunes
November 16th, 2010

Editorial: Editorial: How Many Signs Can One Building Support?
November 15th, 2010

Editorial: Accidents Happen? The Dance Begins
September 16th, 2010

Editorial: Editorial: Oil Spills vs. Hurricanes
September 2nd, 2010

Editorial: Editorial: Fishing Village Atmosphere?
August 22nd, 2010

Editorial: A New Standard of Arrogance
July 29th, 2010

Editorial: Alzheimer`s Sentence
July 24th, 2010

Editorial: Editorial: When the Elephants Stampede, the Pygmies Get Trampled
June 10th, 2010

Editorial: Oil Spills and Independence
May 26th, 2010

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For the Birds

For the Birds

Editorial

The fall migration of birds is well begun. Some species migrate at night and are barely noticed. Other species make the move during daylight hours. Most species migrate without the aid of man. Over the next few weeks Cedar Key News will report the progress of twenty yearling Whooping Cranes being taught to migrate from Wisconsin to a wild life refuge in Florida just forty miles south of Cedar Key.

The survival of certain bird species is in the hands of man. The pelicans of the Gulf of Mexico were nearly wiped out by DDT before it was banned. The pelicans have recovered well. Bald Eagles, Ospreys and other birds of prey were also endangered by DDT, and their populations have recovered.

Whooping Crane populations have declined because their breeding grounds have been infringed upon by man. Now an innovative program hatches Whoopers in captivity and helps them learn to migrate to safe wintering grounds in Florida. The 2005 group of twenty young birds left Wisconsin October 14, being led by dedicated ultralight pilots and cared for at night by an equally dedicated ground crew. They will join a flock of about fifty adults that migrate on their own after being trained by man. With luck the older birds will soon start reproducing, and with additions from the captive breeding program a self-sustaining flock of 150 will be built.

If the Whooping Crane program is successful it will be a fine example of how man can stop pushing other species to extinction and start living cooperatively with them. The program will also have created an attraction for tourists who want to add Whooping Cranes to the list of birds that they have seen in the wild. And even those people who are not keeping a bird list will be able to see a spectacular white bird wheeling in the air over our marshes.

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