How to Use whooping crane in a Sentence

whooping crane

noun
  • Wampanoag is the 394th whooping crane raised or housed at ICF.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 20 June 2021
  • So far the good news is that no whooping crane has died from or been detected with the virus.
    Paul A. Smith, Journal Sentinel, 15 Dec. 2022
  • But the penalties levied on those who shoot whooping cranes tend to be far lower.
    Justin Rohrlich, Quartz, 29 Aug. 2019
  • Tex, a female whooping crane at the San Antonio Zoo, was part of the trouble.
    Carolyn Kormann, The New Yorker, 16 Aug. 2019
  • The whooping crane, or Grus americana, is one of the rarest birds in North America.
    Margaret Osborne, Smithsonian Magazine, 21 June 2022
  • Standing around five feet tall, the whooping crane is the tallest bird in North America, and one of the most endangered.
    Dennis Pillion | Dpillion@al.com, al, 24 Dec. 2019
  • Bryce, the wayward, injured and trouble-maker of a whooping crane, died at the Louisville Zoo on Wednesday.
    James Bruggers, The Courier-Journal, 21 Feb. 2018
  • Return in the morning and listen as a mated pair of whooping cranes standing in the salt marsh call to each other.
    Jody Schmal and Mizanur Rahman, Houston Chronicle, 29 June 2018
  • By the time ornithologist Robert Porter Allen was born on this day in 1905, the whooping crane was already in trouble.
    Kat Eschner, Smithsonian, 24 Apr. 2017
  • Young said there’s one whooping crane that tends to frequent the fields near the observation building, but the others tend to spread out all over the refuge.
    Dennis Pillion | Dpillion@al.com, al, 25 Dec. 2022
  • The state's whooping crane team is hoping W13-20 will become part of the long-term success of the recovery program.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 27 Sep. 2020
  • The unprecedented fledging of a wild whooping crane at Horicon was decades in the making.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 27 Sep. 2020
  • A record eight whooping crane chicks have taken wing in Louisiana after hatching in the wild.
    Janet McConnaughey, ajc, 8 Sep. 2022
  • These scientists set out to answer these questions by studying the life history of the whooping crane.
    Seriously Science, Discover Magazine, 30 Jan. 2018
  • Last November, a whooping crane was killed in Jefferson Davis Parish.
    Sara Sneath | Staff Writer, NOLA.com, 6 Sep. 2020
  • But the Kissimmee Prairie region of Central Florida proved to be a difficult place for whooping cranes to survive and hatch chicks.
    Sara Sneath, NOLA.com, 15 Mar. 2018
  • Young men joined the CCC and achieved a great range of commendable objectives, from the rescue of the whooping crane to massive projects of reforestation and fish stocking.
    Conrad Black, National Review, 7 Apr. 2021
  • She and Brooks had first spoken in 2018 about the whooping crane habitat, which the board, including Collins-Bratton, approved unanimously.
    Robert Wilonsky, Dallas News, 22 Jan. 2020
  • White Oak has previously bred sandhill cranes but never whooping cranes, Shurter said.
    Jenny Staletovich, miamiherald, 9 May 2018
  • This is especially true for the endangered whooping crane, which spends time during migration at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge along the gulf.
    Elena Bruess, San Antonio Express-News, 19 Sep. 2021
  • Birding and conservation groups got involved after the whooping crane became one of the first species on the federal endangered species list in 1967.
    Lindsay Fendt, Smithsonian Magazine, 18 May 2020
  • Many others, such as the California condor, the grizzly bear and the whooping crane, have seen remarkable recovery progress.
    Smithsonian, 18 May 2017
  • In the 1970s an effort began to rehabilitate the whooping crane population, much of it led by the ecologist George W. Archibald.
    Margaret Osborne, Smithsonian Magazine, 21 June 2022
  • The whooping crane recovery plan was created jointly by U.S. and Canada.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 20 June 2021
  • Since then, 100 whooping cranes raised in captivity have been released in Vermillion Parish.
    Sara Sneath, NOLA.com, 15 Mar. 2018
  • To initiate mating, whooping cranes perform a marvellous dance, complete with head bobs, high jumps, and pirouettes.
    Carolyn Kormann, The New Yorker, 16 Aug. 2019
  • The whooping crane's habitat in North America stretches from Florida to Canada.
    Jenny Staletovich, miamiherald, 9 May 2018
  • Brulliard writes: [T]he whooping crane program's end is a profound shift at Patuxent, which does plenty of other research but none so central to its identity.
    Dino Grandoni, Washington Post, 19 Sep. 2017
  • At the Bee Lab, a former garage used for a whooping crane breeding program and then abandoned when the project ended years ago, Droege and his team collect, preserve and photograph the area’s native bee population.
    Katie V. Jones, baltimoresun.com, 20 May 2021
  • For the whooping crane, an endangered species struggling to increase its numbers, each individual added to the flock is critical.
    Paul A. Smith, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 27 Sep. 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'whooping crane.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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