California condors are nesting in the Pacific Northwest for the first time in 100 years, a direct result of a reintroduction ...
By Liz Kimbrough A pair of California condors reintroduced to the Pacific Northwest by the Yurok Tribe appears to have ...
Recent data showing an increase in lead exposure and deaths among critically endangered California condors seems to fly in ...
Lead poisoning is rising in California condors despite years of protection. New research explains why the threat hasn’t gone away.
Disturbing increases in toxic lead exposure are linked to wider foraging by the critically endangered California condor and more wild pigs being shot throughout the state, masking positive effects of ...
Northern California may soon see its first condor fledgling soaring across the skies in more than 100 years. Biologists with the Northern California Condor Restoration Program announced that condor A0 ...
New research reveals why the endangered birds remain at risk years after California banned lead ammunition. Exclusive to KQED.
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.
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.
The California condor story is a quintessential feel-good tale of an extraordinary species that was at the doorstep of extinction in 1982 when just 22 of the enormous scavengers — largest land birds ...
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.