California Condor
Gymnogyps californianus
The California condor (Gymnogyps californianus) is a huge New World vulture of western North America, with a wingspan that can approach three meters, a bald head, dark body, and pale wing patches visible in flight. Condors feed on carrion, soaring for long periods over mountains, canyons, coastal ranges, and desert edges. The species fell to a tiny remnant population in the twentieth century, and every living condor descends from birds protected through an intensive recovery program.
Management of California condors is one of the most hands-on conservation efforts in North America. Captive breeding, careful pair selection, puppet-rearing in some cases, release sites, wing tags, transmitters, nest monitoring, and veterinary treatment all support the wild population. Lead poisoning from spent ammunition remains a major threat, along with power-line collisions, microtrash at nests, and limited safe food in some areas. Zoos that hold condors need large flight spaces, clean carcass-based diets, quiet nesting areas, and staff prepared for a slow-breeding bird with high conservation value.
Colors: Black, Black and White, Brown, Cream, Gray, Orange Head, Pink Head, Red Head, Tan, White, Wild Type, Yellow Head