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  1. Physical Description. The whooping crane is white with contrasting dark legs and a dark bill. Their primary wing feathers have black tips, their eyes are yellow and there is a pinkish hue at the base of the bill. Young are cinnamon in color along the back, with a dull gray or brown on the underbelly and blue eyes.

  2. The adult Whooping Crane is the tallest North American bird. It has a long neck, long dark pointed bill, and long thin black legs. A large male is about 1.5 m tall. In the air, the wings measure 2 m or more between the tips of the long black primaries, or flight feathers, which cannot usually be seen when the bird is at rest.

  3. The whooping crane's primary natural breeding ground is Wood Buffalo National Park, in Canada's Northwest Territories and Alberta. Here the cranes perform elaborate running, leaping, wing-flapping ...

  4. 19 de feb. de 2009 · In a bid to save the endangered whooping crane, biologists and self-taught conservationists are donning hooded costumes and taking to the skies to lead the birds on their annual migration.

  5. A "National Geographic" documentary special detailing the efforts by U.S. and Canadian scientists to save North America's whooping crane which has teetered for decades on the edge of extinction. Flight of the Whooping Crane (1984) - Turner Classic Movies

  6. What is the Spanish language plot outline for Flight of the Whooping Crane (1984)? Flight of the Whooping Crane: Dirigido por David F. Oyster. Con John Huston. Shows the endangered whooping crane's perilous migratory path.

  7. 4 de mar. de 2020 · Distribution of the Whooping Crane in 2014. Populations shown are Aransas/Wood Buffalo population (AWP), Louisiana population (LP), Eastern Migratory population (EMP), and Florida (FP). Formerly this species was more widespread in the prairie wetlands of the northcentral United States and southern Canada (see text).