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Back to nature

TALAGANTE, CHILE (AFP) – Alhue and Mailen were born in captivity but conservationists hope to free the chicks soon as part of a project to boost Chile’s ailing population of Andean condors.

The Andean condor, a type of vulture, is the largest flying bird in the world but its population is considered “vulnerable” by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Endangered Species.

There are just an estimated 6,700 Andean condors living in the wild.

At Chile’s Rehabilitation Centre for Birds of Prey (CRAR), conservationists are trying to boost those numbers.

“The aim is to introduce condors to nature born from condors that cannot be freed, who are here for life,” said CRAR founder Eduardo Pavez.

The CRAR centre in Talagante, 40 kilometres from Santiago, looks after birds that cannot be released into the wild, either because they cannot fly or have become too accustomed to human contact.

Condors are photographed at the Center for the Rehabilitation of Birds of Prey (CRAR) of the Chilean Ornithologists Union, located in the town of Talagante in Santiago, Chile. PHOTO: AFP

The parents of both Alhue, a male, and female Mailen, have lived in the centre for years and cannot be released.

The condor has long been venerated by indigenous peoples in the Americas.

In Andean religious mythology, the condor was a symbol of power and ruled the upper world, acting as an intermediary with the world of spirits.

It features on the coat of arms of several countries, such as Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia and Chile.

It is virtually extinct in Venezuela in the north of the continent, while the largest concentrations are found in the south of Chile and Argentina.

The greatest threat to the condor is human occupation of the Andean mountain range and a lack of food.

CRAR, founded in 1990, takes in all sorts of birds of prey including owls and falcons that are injured, have been in an accident or were kept in captivity.

Its aim is to rehabilitate them and release them back into the wild, but in many cases that is impossible.

Alhue’s mother, for example, was injured by a power line and can no longer fly.

Mailen’s mother, who was brought to the centre at the age of about one, has become too accustomed to humans to be able to survive in the wild. Over the years, CRAR has already freed 13 out of 25 condor chicks born in captivity, with another four due to be soon released.

Within the next six to nine months, once they are fully grown, Alhue and Mailen will be separated from their parents.

The parents will then be able to begin reproducing again while their offspring will start socialising with and learning from other adult condors at the centre. They will be taken to a large cage where adults that cannot be released mix with juveniles preparing for the outside world.

There they can fly around and communicate with other members of their species.

“Here they establish a hierarchy where the adult males dominate. They have to learn that hierarchy, sometimes by force of pecks, so they find their place in condor society,” said Pavez.

That is a vital apprenticeship for Mailen and Alhue ahead of their likely release in the southern hemisphere in spring of 2024 so that they are able to build relationships with other wild condors, get to know their territory and find food.

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