Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon March 10, 2021 Oregon condor program adds nine new prospects D uring a blessing cer- emony seventeen years ago, atwai Wasco Chief Nelson Wallulatum bestowed the name Kun-wak-shun upon the first California condor chick hatched at the Oregon Zoo. The Wasco name Kun- wak-shun refers to thunder and lightning—the tradi- tional Native association of the condor: The bird’s voice was thunder and its eyes would flash lightning. In some Wasco tradition the condor came from the Pa- cific Ocean. In later and more ominous years a darker association arose, as the bird was often seen dur- ing the smallpox, malaria and other plagues that set- tlers brought to Native Co- lumbia River tribes. The condor is among the sacred Native wildlife, and Oregon Zoo In-captivity condor eggs are kept in an incubator. its likeness is a traditional el- ement in beadwork, basketry, regalia and hieroglyphic de- signs of the Paiute, Wasco and Ichishkeen tribes of the Northwest. Atwai Chief Wallulatum long advocated for the re- turn of the California con- dor, or Thunderbird, to the Northwest. And so in 2004 he was asked to bestow a name upon the first in-cap- tivity Oregon Zoo chick, Kun-wak-shun. The Native history of the condor is from time imme- morial. For example: At an- cient tribal village sites along the Columbia, archaeologists have found 9,000-year-old condor bones. Because of the accumulation of bones at specific sites, speculation is that Wasco people may for some reason have kept the birds in captivity. In the nineteenth century the arrival of non-Native settlers brought the demise of the condor to the Oregon Territory and beyond. Lead poisoning was a main cause: The adult condors would in- gest carrion and other game that had been shot with lead bullets. Passing through the system, the eggs of these condors were then deci- mated. The plight of the species was such that in 1987 U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologists captured all of the remaining wild California condors in North America. At the time there were 22 of them. Through a captive breed- ing program, in partnership with the San Diego Zoo and others, biologists in 1992 re- introduced condors into the wild. Today, there may be more than 300 of the birds in the wild. In more recent years, with lead bullets banned from hunting, a challenge in California has been loss of habitat due to wildfires. Wild California condors live in California, Arizona, Utah and Baja California, Mexico. As of yet they do not live in the wild in Or- egon or the Northwest. The Oregon Zoo joined Oregon Zoo Condor at the Oregon Zoo. the California condor breed- ing program in 2003, when they welcomed their first six breeding pairs. The following year saw the birth of the zoo’s first in-captivity chick, Kun-wak- shun. And this year the zoo reports the breeding pairs have produced nine addi- tional condor chick eggs. At adulthood the con- dors will grow to be the larg- est North American birds with a wingspan up to ten feet. Dave McMechan