Once endangered, wood storks have rebounded and been delisted, but shrinking wetland protections could threaten their ...
Forty years ago, wood stork populations in Florida were plummeting. But federal and private efforts have made a dramatic difference, officials say.
The wood stork was once on the brink of extinction and now can be found in 13 counties across Georgia's coast and southern ...
A spindly wading bird found in South Carolina’s wetlands is losing protection under the federal Endangered Species Act.
The wood stork will soon no longer be on the federal endangered species list. Some environmentalists say that's a bad thing.
Birds & Blooms on MSN
Wood stork delisted from endangered species list—but is it too soon?
After being listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1984, wood stork numbers have rebounded significantly. Do the birds still need protection?
The Fish and Wildlife Service determined the bird, once nearly extinct, has rebounded and no longer needs protections.
The wood stork, which live and breeds in parts of southeast Georgia as well as other southeastern states, was first listed in ...
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service settled federal litigation over the species’ plight. But the wood stork will lose its ...
A wood stork, the only stork species native to North America, was rescued in Hialeah after someone reported that it had not moved for several hours on Feb. 22, 2022. Pelican Harbor Seabird Station A ...
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