Inside the Race to Save a Single Condor Egg After Avian Flu Killed Its Mother

How a long-shot rescue turned into an all-hands-on-deck mission to hatch a California Condor in captivity.
The chick in the rescued egg, laid by condor 316, was poorly positioned and required an 鈥渁ssisted hatch鈥 by veterinarian Stephanie Lamb. Here she carefully cuts away the egg. Photo: Karine Aigner

The Discovery 

For the people who work with California Condors in the cliffs and canyons of the southwest U.S., March was devastating. In a few short weeks, highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) swept through the flock in Arizona, killing as many as 21 birds. Staff from The Peregrine Fund, a raptor-focused conservation group that leads condor restoration in the region, spent their days collecting sick and dying birds from the desert landscape and closely tracking each individual in the flock for signs of illness. Most concerning was if a condor settled in one spot and stopped moving鈥攁s when condor 316 made her way into a cliffside cave in mid-March and didn鈥檛 budge. 

鈥淚t was very nerve-wracking,鈥 says Shawn Farry, the on-site condor program manager. Farry worried that 316 had contracted the virus that was killing her flock-mates, but it was also the time of year when a condor might hunker down for another reason: to lay an egg. And indeed, 316 was holed up with a male. 鈥淲e were hopeful that maybe it was just breeding behavior and that she wasn鈥檛 symptomatic,鈥 Farry says. But as the team would soon learn, 鈥淯nfortunately, both can be true at the same time.鈥

On March 25, condor 316 reemerged from the cave. From her lethargic movements, the team could tell she was truly sick. Capturing her in that condition was easy, and the team transported her to their rehabilitation partners at Liberty Wildlife in Phoenix, Arizona. Back at the cliff, 316鈥檚 mate was staying put. 鈥淲e were like, oh no,鈥 says Tim Hauck, director of The Peregrine Fund鈥檚 condor program. 鈥淭his probably isn鈥檛 a good thing for him to be in this dark, wet cave where we knew there was an infectious disease.鈥 

Monitoring the male, condor 680, was complicated by the location of his hideaway high on a cliff face. But in mid-April, a crew member checking in on him caught a glimpse inside the cave and spotted a nest鈥攁nd an egg. For 680, that was bad news. A California Condor egg takes around 57 days to hatch, . 鈥淎nd you can't let that egg go cold,鈥 Hauck says. Both sexes sit on the egg, trading off every three to five days. The team estimated 680 had been solo incubating for around three weeks, and the egg likely had about another month to go. 鈥淲e didn't want to see him succumb to HPAI because he was so dedicated,鈥 Hauck says. Moreover, his chances of hatching the egg alone were 鈥渟lim to none.鈥

The Rescue 

With the outlook so bleak, the team decided to retrieve the egg鈥攎ostly for the sake of 680. Removing the egg would give him the chance to leave the dank, potentially infectious cave and seek food and water. Besides, Hauck says, 鈥淲e thought that the egg was probably dead.鈥

Still, they made a careful, if somewhat scrappy, plan to collect the egg with a cooler, towels, and hand warmers. On April 17, 680 left the nest to stretch his wings. The crew took the opportunity to hike down into the cave, gently bundle up the egg, and carry it back out.

Staff from The Peregrine Fund and Liberty Wildlife then relayed the cooler to Liberty's clinic, a four-and-a-half-hour drive away, where the care team received the egg with tempered expectations. They鈥檇 spent the preceding weeks in crisis mode caring for flu-infected condors, and despite their utmost effort, many birds didn鈥檛 make it. Among the dead was 316, who laid the egg. Like the on-site crew, the clinic staff initially just hoped removing the egg would give 680 a shot at survival. But then Jan Miller, animal care coordinator, 鈥渃andled鈥 the egg, holding it to a bright light to illuminate its contents. If the egg contained a developing embryo, she would be able to see a rosy glow of blood vessels or even movement. She saw both. Immediately, Miller says, the mood shifted to: 鈥淥h my god, it鈥檚 actually viable!鈥

Although the surface of the egg had tested negative for HPAI, The Peregrine Fund decided not to risk introducing the disease to their breeding facility in Boise, Idaho鈥攖he in the world. Miller and the rest of the animal care team at Liberty took on the responsibility of hatching 316鈥檚 last egg.

鈥淲e incubate and hatch eggs here all the time,鈥 Miller says, from songbirds to Great Horned Owls鈥攂ut never a condor. Full-grown California Condors are among the largest birds in North America, with a wingspan of nearly 10 feet, and their eggs are bigger than any Liberty had ever incubated. The egg didn鈥檛 fit in the clinic鈥檚 brooder, a rocking device that mimics how adult birds shift their eggs in the nest, so the Liberty staff marked the egg and rotated it by hand six times a day, while also carefully controlling the temperature and humidity and monitoring the embryo through candling. 

By the time the egg arrived, the wave of HPAI that hit the southwest flock seemed to be passing鈥攏o more sick condors were brought to the clinic, and the ones still in their care seemed to be recovering鈥攂ut taking charge of the egg brought a whole new kind of anxiety. 鈥淚f we had to go walk the hallway to candle it, everybody's like, get outta the way! Get outta the way!鈥 Miller says. 鈥淧recious cargo!鈥

The Hatch 

For three weeks the Liberty care team fastidiously tended to the egg. The embryo seemed to be developing normally, but there was still concern that the condor growing inside could harbor HPAI, passed through 316. If that were the case, the egg would likely never hatch. If a chick did emerge, it wouldn鈥檛 survive for long.

On May 8, the egg pipped: The chick inside cracked a tiny hole through the shell, the first step of hatching. But there was a problem. Rather than pipping at the egg鈥檚 vertical midpoint, the chick had broken through at the egg鈥檚 end, indicating it was misaligned and wouldn鈥檛 be able to free itself from the egg. 鈥淜ind of like a breach baby,鈥 Miller says. 鈥淲e needed to help it hatch.鈥

Condors typically take 72 hours from pip to hatch, but by the next day it was clear the chick had used up its store of air inside and needed to emerge. Veterinarian Stephanie Lamb gloved up. Using surgical pliers, she one small piece at a time. The Liberty Wildlife team crowded around, while Hauck and other staff from The Peregrine Fund watched on a live feed. Lamb picked off pieces of shell, now with her fingers, and suddenly they could all see the squirming chick. The rest happened quickly. Just five minutes after picking up the egg, Lamb was cradling a tiny, pink condor the size of her hand, with a bulbous bald head and wispy white feathers. 

The room filled with quiet oohs and laughter as the team got their first look at the condor. Watching the live feed, Hauck says, 鈥淚 kind of freaked out a little bit. We all did.鈥 He was overwhelmed thinking of the chick鈥檚 parents, especially its mother. Condor 316 had raised two other chicks in previous years, but neither had survived to adulthood. 鈥淪he actually left behind a bit of a legacy,鈥 Hauck says, 鈥渟omething that will go forward.鈥

Lamb immediately swabbed the hatchling for HPAI. If the test came back negative, the chick could join the captive flock at Boise. Most critically, it would be able to be placed with foster parents鈥攁ctual adult condors鈥攚hich would dramatically increase the chances it could be released in the wild. That would never happen if the chick got too familiar with humans. To help prevent that from happening, the Liberty team placed the chick with a nearly life-size condor plush toy鈥攁 gift to the clinic they happened to have on hand鈥攚hile they awaited the HPAI test results and donned full-coverage camouflage during feedings.

The Adoption 

Two days later, good news arrived: The new chick was free of avian flu and could go to Boise, where Leah Esquivel, The Peregrine Fund鈥檚 propagation manager, waited to place it with foster parents. The clock was ticking, Esquivel says. 鈥淭hey do have good facial recognition, and this chick was getting older by the minute,鈥 she says, 鈥淪o I was just wanting to get it under those parents and have it stop staring at our faces all the time.鈥

But that meant introducing the days-old chick, who weighed less than a pound, to two adult California Condors that hadn鈥檛 hatched it. Usually, the process goes well; the foster parents鈥 nurturing instincts kick in right away, and they care for the chick as their own. But there is always the risk that the birds won鈥檛 accept the interloper and instead attack鈥攁 quick end for a defenseless chick.

In Phoenix, most of the Liberty staff said their goodbyes. The chick, who turned out to be female, was now officially condor 1221. In Boise, they were calling her 鈥渢he Liberty chick.鈥 But to the team that hatched her, she was Milagra, Spanish for 鈥渕iracle.鈥 They hoped her good luck would hold and sent her off with Lamb in a single-propeller plane, flown by a friend of The Peregrine Fund, so small that Miller and another Liberty staffer had to catch a commercial flight to help welcome the chick to Idaho.

Esquivel selected a superlatively gentle duo to receive the chick. 鈥淭hey are just so, so sweet with each other,鈥 she says. They are also seasoned parents: The pair successfully fostered a chick together last year, and have each raised many more with other mates鈥攁ll fosters in the case of the female, condor 59, called Rotciwi. The male, Cuyama, is condor 27. Hatched in the wild in 1983, he was once among the last two dozen California Condors in the world. 

But there was a complication: Rotciwi and Cuyama were already caring for a foster chick. Wild condors hatch a single chick at a time, and while double brooding in captivity is possible, Esquivel wanted to minimize risks for 1221. Esquivel and her team decided to remove the first chick from Rotciwi and Cuyama and place it with other foster parents. Then, Esquivel would introduce 1221. She was a little nervous, because 1221 was half a week older than the chick she would replace. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 sound like a lot, but they grow so fast,鈥 Esquivel says, 鈥淭hat was a little scary when we did the swap, to feel the difference in the chicks鈥 size.鈥

To everyone鈥檚 relief, the exchange went smoothly. Cuyama was the first to inspect 1221. 鈥淗e just looked around a little bit, and then hopped in and started brooding,鈥 Esquivel says. 鈥淚t was like nothing happened.鈥

The Future  

The road to release is still a long one for condor 1221. She will stay with her foster parents for the next 6-8 months, growing rapidly. After that, she鈥檒l join the other condors hatched in Boise this year in a pre-release pen, where she鈥檒l practice flying and learn condor social etiquette from an older mentor bird鈥攁 role her foster mom, Rotciwi, held for eight years. If 1221 can be released, it will likely happen in September 2024.

Wild condors now number in the hundreds, but their recovery is still highly managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and dozens of partner organizations. Precisely where each captive-bred condor gets released depends, in large part, on the bird鈥檚 genetics to ensure each flock is as diverse as possible. FWS won鈥檛 finalize those decisions until early next year, but everyone who has worked with 1221 hopes she鈥檒l be returned to the flock in Arizona, which lost so many condors to HPAI this spring. Hauck says he sees no reason why that wouldn鈥檛 happen. 鈥淚'm going to fight like hell to make sure that it does,鈥 he says.

With 1221 now past the scariest milestones, the many people who had a hand in her rescue can relax a little. 鈥淚鈥檓 incredibly relieved,鈥 Esquivel says. The staff at Liberty Wildlife, Miller says, can finally breathe. But for all the stress, shepherding Milagra into the world was also a welcome reprieve after weeks of caring for sick and dying condors. Megan Mosby, Liberty鈥檚 executive director, says, 鈥淪he really did represent a sense of hope in what had been a really bleak period of time.鈥

Things are looking up for the species, as well. HPAI seems to have abated in the southwest flock with the return of longer days and warmer weather. Meanwhile, the United States Department of Agriculture recently announced against avian flu. Vaccination trials are with Black Vultures, a condor relative. 

As for condor 680, 1221鈥檚 biological father, removing the egg was a success: The adult bird has remained healthy. 鈥淗e seems to have dodged a bullet,鈥 Hauck says.

Out of an abundance of caution, The Peregrine Fund is still holding off on supplying food and water for the birds as they did before the arrival of HPAI. According to Farry, the flock is doing fine without the help.

Despite the calamitous spring, Farry says the team is keeping their spirits up. Maybe it comes with the job: 鈥淚f you work on condors, you have to be optimistic,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e can all hope for the day that 1221 has a chick out there of her own.鈥