Hawaiian Crow
Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the Hawaiian crow, now extinct in the wild.
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Miranda Krestovnikoff presents the now extinct in the wild Hawaiian Crow. It's hard to imagine any crow becoming endangered, but only a hundred or so the formerly widespread Hawaiian crow survive and all of them in captivity. Also known by its Hawaiian name 'Alala' these sooty black brown crows produce a chorus of caws and screeches. Early settlers in the Hawaiian archipelago reduced their numbers, leaving the remaining populations vulnerable to introduced predators; feral pigs further reduced the fruit-laden understory plants favoured by the crow. The species was last seen in the wild in 2002. All may not be lost. A captive breeding programme overseen by San Diego Zoo is hoping to reintroduce the crows into the wild, so perhaps the Hawaiian forests will once again resound with their calls.
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Hawaiian Crow (Corvus hawaiiensis)
Webpage image courtesy of聽Jack Jeffery聽/ naturepl.com.
NPL Ref聽01473774 漏聽Jack Jeffery聽/ naturepl.com.
Recording of Hawaiian Crow by William V Ward / Ref: ML 13434
This programme contains a wildtrack 聽kindly provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology; recorded by William V Ward on 12 Aug 1961,聽in Hawai County, Hawaii.
Broadcasts
- Mon 6 Oct 2014 05:5891热爆 Radio 4
- Fri 25 Sep 2015 05:5891热爆 Radio 4
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