In this Sunday, Jan. 15, 2006 file photo, a whooping crane eats a crab at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, near Rockport, Texas. More than 20 percent of the world's only naturally migrating flock of whooping cranes were lost and are presumed to have died from April 2008 to April 2009, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. (AP Photo / Ron Heflin, File)

By MARIA SUDEKUM FISHER (AP)  KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The world’s only naturally migrating whooping cranes, and the species’ best chance for survival, died at about twice their normal rate last year and will likely see an overall drop in their numbers, a worrying sign for the once near-extinct bird that has been making a comeback. The whooping crane — the tallest bird in North America at 5 1/2 feet tall — numbered just 15 in 1941 but now numbers 539 and is considered a success story by conservationists. There are three North American flocks but only one that migrates without human help, traveling every autumn from northern Canada to the Gulf Coast in Texas. Normally, about 10 percent of the flock dies off each year, but last year about 21 percent died off. Including new births, this year’s flock is expected to drop by about 20 birds from last year’s 270 when counted after returning to the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge this fall, said Tom Stehn, who oversees efforts to help the whooping crane for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. That would mark the first population decline for the flock since 2002. “We’re trying to figure out what’s killing all these whooping cranes,” Stehn said. That flock typically grows by about six birds each year, but it dropped 19 birds between April 2008 to April 2009, as 57 of the flock’s 266 birds died and were replaced by just 38 surviving hatchlings. Hatchlings aren’t counted in the total population until they have made it to Aransas, outside Corpus Christi, Texas. This year only 52 birds hatched to the flock — a six-year low — and only 22 of those survived, Stehn said. “It’s disappointing,” he said. “It’ll be interesting to see how it turns out this year.” The flock’s population tends to dip about once each decade, but last year’s spring decline was so sharp and unexpected it was “alarming,” Stehn said. …

 Death rate spikes among migrating whooping cranes