![The Quest To Save The California Condor - podcast episode cover](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2022/06/24/condor_sq-bf063c50933a020c7370a0282b3de91edd1d4ae5.jpg?s=3000&c=66&f=jpg)
Episode description
Historically, the California condor soared across the western skies of North America. But by the 1980s, the bird was on the edge of extinction — just 22 remained.Thanks to decades of conservation work, the California condor population has rebounded to a couple hundred birds in Central California and Arizona. And this May, a large partnership led by the Yurok Tribe re-introduced the birds to Northern California.
Today, host Aaron Scott talks to Yurok biologist Tiana Williams-Claussen about the years-long quest to return the birds to their ancestral skies, and the importance of condor — who the Yurok call Prey-go-neesh — to the Yurok people and the natural world.
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