The likely discovery of a condor egg on California's north coast gives new hope for the recovery of the endangered bird.
A pair of endangered California condors are likely nesting on Yurok tribal land in Northern California for the first time in ...
Scientists say a pair of condors are likely tending to an egg high up in a California redwood — the first time that's happened there in more than a century. A Yurok wildlife official gives an update.
Two condors in far northwestern California appear to be caring for a recently laid egg, a historic moment in an effort to bring the massive raptors back to the Yurok Tribe's historic homeland.
Researchers observed the behavior of the condors to conclude that the couple may be tending to their newly laid egg.
Experts haven't confirmed the existence of an egg, but the nesting birds' behaviors suggest one was laid in early February ...
The Yurok Tribe says it believes a pair of condors released in 2022 have built the first nest in their ancestral lands in more than 100 years, and could be incubating their first egg.
Tribal biologists in northern California say two critically endangered California condors could be tending an egg which would produce the region’s first fledgling in more than 100 years.
Condors A0 and A1 are slightly older than the rest of their cohort, at 6 years and 10 months, and are of an age where young ...
Biologists in northern California believe they have spotted an egg in a condor nest in an old-growth redwood, the first such discovery in 100 years.
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 ...