Two California Condors Evade Scientists, Produce a Secret Love Child 

By Kristina Bravo, TakePart 

12 January 15 



romantic getaway in the woods for a couple of California condors produced a 
thrilling surprise for scientists in Northern California: a carcass-loving 
bundle of joy. 

It’s only the third time a pair of mating condors eluded the prying eyes of 
researchers in the wild since they started releasing the endangered birds in 
Big Sur in 1997. 

The lovebirds, identified as Shadow and Wild 1, produced an egg and incubated 
it for two months. They raised the hatchling for six months before the 
scientists monitoring the Ventana wilderness region discovered it. 

According to Joe Burnett, a senior wildlife biologist with the Ventana Wildlife 
Society, the condors’ elaborate mating ritual is typically hard to miss. 
Suitors hang around a female every day for about a month, fighting each other 
off. 

“[Female condors] make the boys pay their dues,” Burnett told The San Francisco 
Chronicle . “And when they do finally mate, it’s nothing spectacular. He just 
mounts her and they copulate for less than a minute.” 

According to the group, 425 condors—captive and wild—survive. The birds feed on 
the carcasses of deer, pigs, and other animals targeted by hunters who use lead 
bullets . Lead poisoning nearly wiped out the species 30 years ago. In 1987, 
scientists captured the last 27 California condors in the wild and placed them 
in a breeding program. The Big Sur population came from that project. 

“This is truly exciting to witness as it offers another example of condors 
surviving on their own,” Kelly Sorenson, executive director of the Ventana 
Wildlife Society, said in a statement. 

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