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whooping crane
(redirected from whooper)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
whooping crane: see crane crane, large wading bird found in marshes in the Northern Hemisphere and in Africa. Although sometimes confused with herons, cranes are more closely related to rails and limpkins.
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whooping crane

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Whooping crane (Grus americana).
(credit: H. William Belknap)
Migratory North American bird (Grus americana) and one of the world's rarest birds, on the verge of extinction. The tallest North American bird, it is almost 5 ft (150 cm) tall and has a wingspread of about 7 ft (210 cm). It is white with black-tipped wings, black legs, and a bare red face and crown. Its shrill, whooping call can be heard for 2 miles (3 km). Almost exterminated in the early 20th century, it became the object of intensive conservation efforts; by century's end there were still fewer than 300 wild and captive individuals. See also sandhill crane.


whooping crane [′hu̇p·iŋ ‚krān]
(vertebrate zoology)
Grus americana.A member of a rare North American migratory species of wading birds; the entire species forms a single population.


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The Mongolia/05 isolate was obtained from a dead whooper swan (Cygnus cygnus) and was chosen because of its known lethality in wild waterfowl.
And with an abundant food supply, the brown trout's solitary lifestyle and the Twin Lakes' colder waters, experts believe there is little reason to doubt the lakes will again yield the trout-opener whooper - and again it will be a brown.
Right now, ten young Whoopers living at Necedah National Wildlife Refuge near Necedah, Wisconsin, are waiting to take their first flight to Florida.
 
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