California condors take flight again, but survival isn’t guaranteed

After nearly vanishing from the wild, the California condor is soaring over North America once more, thanks to a decades-long conservation effort spanning the U.S. and Mexico — but keeping the species alive remains an uphill battle.

Iván Carrillo reports for Knowable Magazine.


In short:

  • Conservationists have worked for more than 20 years to reintroduce condors to the wild, with efforts centered in Baja California, Mexico and several U.S. states.
  • Despite laws banning lead bullets in California, many condors continue to suffer from lead exposure after feeding on contaminated carcasses.
  • Scientists are using cutting-edge genetic research to manage the population, track inbreeding risks and even uncover rare cases of condors reproducing asexually — an evolutionary surprise that could help the species persist.

Key quote:

“There is a perception that when you release a condor it is already a success, but for there to be real success, you have to monitor them constantly.”

— Juan Vargas Velasco, biologist and field manager for the California Condor Conservation Program

Why this matters:

The condor’s survival is crucial to ecosystems that depend on scavengers to prevent disease spread. Their return is proof of what science and persistence can accomplish, but it’s also a reminder that nature’s victories are rarely permanent with humans' constant enroachment.

Read more: Hunting, fishing, and science denial

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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