United States | Vulture capital

The unsteady comeback of the California condor

The bird’s plight is a study in unintended consequences

California condor
Keep calm and carionPhotograph: Getty Images
|Big Sur

IT MAY HAVE been the smelliest job in conservation. Whoever drew the short straw sat in a hole in the dirt underneath a carcass. Then they waited for a California condor to come and have a snack. “That’s not a pretty job at all,” says Chandra David, an animal keeper for the Los Angeles Zoo. “When a bird would land somebody would radio in saying ‘Now!’ and they would reach up and grab the bird’s legs.” This, and other less nauseating methods, is how the last remaining condors were brought in from the wild in the 1980s.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Vulture capital”

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From the July 6th 2024 edition

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