Brandon and COBirders,
I asked that question to a member of the ABA Rules Committee, Nick Block, and here is his interpretation of the new listing rules regarding the experimental population of Whooping Cranes that stopped in Colorado on their way to central New Mexico for the winter and to Idaho to breed with Sanhill Cranes and not Whoopers in the spring and summer.
Bill Maynard
Colorado Springs
Hi Bill,
I do not think these would be countable if they did not hatch eggs with their own species. I'll let you know if the RSEC as a whole thinks differently, though.
Cheers,
Nick Block
From: cobirds@googlegroups.com [mailto:cobirds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Brandon
Sent: Monday, October 13, 2014 8:52 PM
To: Cobirds
Subject: [cobirds] Re: condors in CO were NOT countable
There seems to be some people who didn't see any of Whooping Cranes (there have only been a few -- though many people back in the 1990s saw the juvenile Whooping Crane around Thurston Reservoir, in Prowers County) in eastern Colorado, wanting to know, if they can now count the birds that migrated from Idaho to New Mexico, and stopped off in the San Luis Valley. Does anyone know about the count-ability of those birds in Colorado?
Brandon Percival
Pueblo West, CO
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