SAN JOSE, Calif. — In a milestone for the recovery of the California condor, a condor chick has hatched in the wild, survived and flown out of its nest at Pinnacles National Park for the first time since the 1890s.
The bird, a female born in April, is not the first chick to be born in the 12 years since condors bred in captivity were re-introduced to the 26,000-acre park, about 80 miles south of San Jose.
But she is the first to survive long enough to leave the nest and begin the path to adulthood, a major step for North America’s largest bird as it continues a slow-but-steady path from near extinction.
“It’s significant,” said Steve Kirkland, a biologist and California condor program coordinator with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “Self-sustaining reproduction in the wild is the primary goal.”