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Once-endangered waterfowl now thriving in Wisconsin

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The goal was to band the birds for population studies and take measurements and blood samples.

The roundups are done in late summer, just before the cygnets begin flying. An occasional adult is caught, too, during its flightless molting period.

The DNR conducted the banding outings each year since 1997. But thanks to the success of the trumpeter recovery program, state wildlife managers recently announced that the 2012 swan capture was the last.

“It’s the end of an era,” said Sumner Matteson, a DNR ecologist who co-wrote the trumpeter swan recovery plan in 1986. “But it’s a happy ending.”

Like most species of wildlife in North America, the trumpeter declined through the 19th and early 20th centuries. The trumpeter was killed for its flesh, its skin and its feathers. The birds’ skins were fashioned into powder puffs. Famed naturalist John James Audubon favored trumpeter swan quills for his drawing pens. The feathers also were used to adorn hats.

By the mid-1900s, only a small population of trumpeter swans existed in Montana and a larger group in Alaska.

To help restore regional populations of the species, the Trumpeter Swan Society formed in 1968.

The first Midwestern trumpeter recovery effort began in Minnesota in the late 1960s with the transfer of adult birds from Montana.

The Wisconsin trumpeter reintroduction project got its start in 1987. Initial efforts to use mute swans to hatch and raise trumpeter young were largely unsuccessful.

Starting in 1989, the DNR implemented a decoy-rearing technique. The eggs were obtained from Alaska by Jurewicz, Matteson and Terry and Mary Kohler of Windway Capital Corp. in Sheboygan.

The Kohlers flew the aircraft and donated their time.

With approval from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Alaska officials, the Wisconsin crew was allowed to take eggs from trumpeter nests, always leaving at least two eggs for the pair to raise.

Eight trips followed, each yielding up to 50 trumpeter eggs. Pat Manthey, a DNR avian ecologist, also traveled with the egg-collection group for several years.

The Wisconsin trumpeter recovery story has two distinct Milwaukee-area connections.

The trumpeter eggs were hatched at the Milwaukee County Zoo.

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