PETERSBURG, Pa. — A young sandhill crane named Jane is the newest animal ambassador at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center.
The gray and rust-feathered crane came to the Klingsberg Aviary at Shaver’s Creek from a rescue center in Wisconsin, arriving just before the center’s winter closure in December. She is ready to meet the public following the center’s Jan. 25 reopening, said Paige Sutherland, wildlife education program director at Shaver’s Creek.
The addition of a sandhill crane is a major step toward diversifying the aviary from its origins as a raptor center, Sutherland said.
“I see it as an awesome opportunity,” Sutherland said. “Cranes inspire dances because of their intricate, delicate courtship behaviors, and they have tracheas that are compared to brass instruments. They’re a beautiful artistic element of nature.”
Cranes occupy such a wide range of habitats that “when you protect them and their habitat, you're preserving everything that operates within that ecosystem,” she added.
Sandhill cranes are one of the oldest birds in North America. They are native to Pennsylvania, but their population dwindled in the state because of hunting and over-development of the wetlands and grasslands where they live and breed. Now protected from hunting in Pennsylvania and most eastern states, their numbers are bouncing back.
“We want people to know how wonderful they are and to help preserve their habitat in our area,” said Joe Whitehead, aviary coordinator.