Poem: ‘Unison Call’
NEWS | 26 August 2025
I agree my information will be processed in accordance with the Scientific American and Springer Nature Limited Privacy Policy After Gee Whiz, the first whooping crane hatched at the International Crane Foundation in Baraboo, Wis., and the work of crane recovery So, extirpation: Wings, glint-white, black-tipped, seven feet wide, river over glyptodonts and plow horses, marshes and farms, guns and snowy plumed hats, until power lines zap elegant necks and we count whoopers on fingers and toes. So, we make a little wetland space, in Texas. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. So, one bird-loving guy says: If we stick with it, they’re gonna come through. A second says: If it flies, it dies. So, life. A zoo-born bird craves a human mate. Seven years the first guy dances with her before she lays a wrinkled buff egg. Around its rare yolk, cells swell and begin to squirm in the candling machine’s glow. So, Gee Whiz. His weird shell dries, requires precise ice water to plump his tiny sack. He pulses, peeps, hatches hungry. Too small, he drinks from a tube. Too caged, he pecks the heck out of chow and the strange cranes who fill his bowl. When raccoons kill his mama, he lives. When the second guy shoots whoopers in Texas, his genes live. When you see your love— both of you stretch your throats skyward, bugle your primordial calls to your kind, rising nest by incubator, marsh by heart, ultralight by fledging cinnamon chick.
Author: Clara Moskowitz. Elizabeth Kuelbs. Dava Sobel.
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