This is an interesting article based on the research of Mark Berres into the genetic diversity of different populations of eastern Sandhill Cranes.
This is an interesting article based on the research of Mark Berres into the genetic diversity of different populations of eastern Sandhill Cranes.
Learn about our site and writers, subscribe below or contact us.
Be informed whenever new posts are published
You have successfully joined our subscriber list.
New writers welcome – please contact us for details.
Beat Writer Posting Calendar
Monday
7 AM: Kai Pflug
Tuesday
7 AM: Donna Schulman (monthly)
Wednesday
7 AM: Patrick O’Donnell (monthly)
1 PM: Faraaz Abdool (biweekly)
Thursday
7 AM: Paul Lewis
Friday
7 AM: David Tomlinson
Saturday:
7 AM: Luca Feuerriegel (biweekly)
7 AM: Peter Penning (biweekly)
Sunday:
7 AM: Hannah Buschert (monthly)
All times are Eastern US.
Any-Time Contributors:
Jason Crotty
Mark Gamin
Angela Minor
Clare Morton
Dragan Simic
Aleksandar Topalov
I would speculate that if you ranked the things that mattered to the kind of person that hunts cranes, genetic diversity, of anything at all, would not rate highly.
I did a paper on Sandhill Cranes last year and was very surprised to discover that people would shoot cranes or any other sort of bird. It’s crazy.
Hey Corey, this sounds like another great reason not to hunt the Eastern Sandhill Cranes, but like Duncan says, I don’t think hunters give a rat’s ass about biological diversity, nor probably does the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Wisconsin Wildlife Federation, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, nor the Republican congressmen representing the state of Wisconsin who have voted against every conservation issue raised in that state.
Read this statement on Wisconsin’s Senator Ron Johnson’s website regarding the Keystone XL Pipeline fiasco.
It’s just man showing how big and bad he is by shooting defenseless things. So sick of this kind of “Deliverance” senseless killing and for what?
Only a sick degenerate ahole would hunt and kill Sandhill Cranes. Hope an alligator bites off your tiny peckers.