Community Corner

Extremely Rare Whooping Cranes Touch Down In Kane County

A pair of Whooping Cranes and their colt stopped by Muirhead Springs Forest Preserve earlier this month.

Forest preserve district officials say there are less than 800 Whooping Cranes in the world.
Forest preserve district officials say there are less than 800 Whooping Cranes in the world. (Kane County Forest Preserve District )

Staff heard from multiple channels – US Fish & Wildlife let IDNR know, who then contacted us. We also had various bird-watchers in the area let us know. In addition, some of our staff are “birders” and they knew about it as well. So it really came in simultaneously from multiple sources. Muirhead Springs has really been a birding hotspot, especially since the wetland restoration began a year ago, so we regularly have birdwatchers at the preserve.

More info on Muirhead Springs is on page 3 of our TreeLine Newsletter, this month, as well: https://kaneforest.com/upload/The%20TreeLine%20Newsletter.pdf

I hope that helps!

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HAMPSHIRE, IL — A family of critically endangered Whooping Cranes made a brief visit in early November to Muirhead Springs Forest Preserve in Hampshire.

A pair of Whooping Cranes and their colt stopped by the preserve on Nov. 9 to 10, forest preserve district officials said. Kane County's forest preserve district employees started hearing about the visitors from officials with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Illinois Department of Natural Resources and area bird watchers, Laurie Metanchuk, director of community affairs for the forest preserve district, told Patch.

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"Staff started hearing from multiple channels [about the cranes]," Metanchuk said. "it really came in simultaneously from multiple sources."

A sighting of a Whooping Crane is quite rare since there are less than 800 of the birds left in the world, according to local forest preserve officials.

In the past year, Muirhead Springs has become a birding hotspot, Metanchuk said. A wetland restoration project, which began last year, is to thank for an increase in bird traffic.

“This is the truest form of validation that we’re on the right track with our land management,” said Forest Preserve District Executive Director Benjamin Haberthur. “We don’t manage for a single species, but for the entire ecosystem. A visit from a species — of which there are less than 800 in the entire world — should make everyone take notice that something very special indeed is happening here at Muirhead Springs Forest Preserve.”

For more than 10 years, the forest preserve district has been working to transform Muirhead Springs from agriculture land — which it was for more than 140 years — into a high-quality prairie habitat. With the acquisition of additional land adjacent to the preserve, the district had the opportunity to spearhead a larger-scale restoration at the forest preserve.

In late 2022, the district began both disabling the historic drainage system to begin the wetland restoration and re-meandering the old agriculture ditch into a naturalized tributary as part of a creek restoration. Birds quickly took notice of the improved habitat.

“Almost immediately, with the combination of restored prairie and newly created wet areas, waterfowl, shorebirds, gulls, terns, pelicans and many other water-related birds have flocked to the site,” said District Wildlife Technician Sadie Dainko.

“It has been astonishing to see how quickly species have responded to these changes. Muirhead Springs has become a hotspot for outdoor enthusiasts to see myriad bird species seldom seen elsewhere in Kane County,” Dainko said.

Species that have been spotted at the preserve include Black-necked Stilt, American Avocet, Black Tern, American Bittern, Horned Grebe, Phalarope, Swan and American White Pelican. According to data from eBird.org, there’s been a 91 percent increase in bird diversity in 2023, compared to an entire period that ran from 2019 to 2022.

The combination of open water, wetland habitat and intact grasslands has drawn further rare visitors including the Say’s Phoebe — a western desert bird — as well as Lark Sparrow, Grasshopper Sparrow, Longspur and more.

Dainko said that not only has there been an increase in grassland bird diversity, there has been an increase in nearly every category of bird species: warblers, raptors, flycatchers, swallows, shrub and woodland passerines.

Haberthur added that “Whoopers” only rarely touch down in Kane County, but this is now the second instance of the birds paying visits to Kane County forest preserves.

“We’ve also had a few visit Nelson Lake Marsh within Dick Young Forest Preserve in Batavia, last spring. We recently installed a water-control structure to better approximate natural hydrology there. We had three Whooping Cranes visit, as a result,” he said.

As popular as Muirhead Springs Forest Preserve has become, the site is still under restoration. There are wetland plug-planting projects planned in spring, and areas may need to temporarily be blocked off to give the new plants an opportunity to take hold. The district also reminds the public to stay on trails.

Muirhead Springs Forest Preserve is located at 42W855 Bahr Road, Hampshire.


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