Researchers concerned after endangered whooping cranes test positive for bird flu
SASKATOON — A wildlife biologist says it’s deeply concerning that two dead members of a critically endangered flock of birds that only breed in Canadian marshes have tested positive for the avian flu.
Mark Bidwell with the Canadian Wildlife Service says the deaths in Saskatchewan mark the first time the highly pathogenic virus has been detected in the wild population of whooping cranes — Canada’s tallest bird.
“There are only about 550 (wild) whooping cranes so losing even one of them hits pretty hard because every single individual is vital to the survival of this species,” Bidwell said in an interview Wednesday.
“It’s the only wild and self-sustaining flock of whooping cranes in the world that we as Canadians are really fortunate to still have with us.”


