Source and more details below. Thanks for posting, OP!
“The rare ʻalalā Hawaiian crow was successfully reintroduced into the wild in Maui more than 20 years after being declared extinct [in the wild], officials announced Wednesday, December 4, 2024.
Why it matters: "ʻAlalā are found nowhere else on Earth, and their existence is essential in Hawaiʻi,” per a statement from the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, which worked to reintroduce the crows. “As they fly from tree to tree, these corvids disperse seeds that help grow new trees and restore native forests.”
ʻAlalā “also help provide food and shelter for other indigenous wildlife that share their island,” according to the the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “Their very presence supports and even propagates their ecosystem’s rich biodiversity.”
The big picture: The endangered ʻalalā are sacred in Hawaiian culture and regarded as spiritual family guardians, per the Hawaiin Department of Land and Natural Resources.
They went extinct in the wild in 2002 and earlier attempts to reintroduce these intelligent birds — one of only two corvid species known to use twigs as tools to reach food — were unsuccessful.
Conservationists have now declared the introduction of five Hawaiian crows to Maui’s Kīpahulu Forest Reserve last month a success so far.
What they did: “To prepare, experts raised the two females and three males in a social group to strengthen their relationship-building skills,” according to the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance.
“This approach helped the ʻalalā practice how they’d depend on each other, giving them every opportunity to succeed in native habitats. Teams also worked closely on prerelease assessments, looking at how the birds were likely to respond to predators and how they’d seek native foods like insects and fruits.”
The crows were then transferred from the Maui Bird Conservation Center to a temporary field aviary on the slopes of Haleakalā before being released.
Stunning stat: There were fewer than 20 ʻalalā in the late 1990s. Now, there are more than 110 individuals due to conservation efforts.
What we’re watching: “The endgame is to get to a self-sustaining population on Hawaii Island,” said Michelle Bogardus, a deputy field supervisor at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to the Washington Post. “The ʻalalā are part of the natural and cultural fabric of Hawaii Island, and they belong there.”“