Two East African crowned crane chicks walk with their keeper at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. Photo courtesy San Diego Zoo
Two East African crowned crane chicks walk with their keeper at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. Photo courtesy San Diego Zoo

Two East African crowned crane chicks hatched last month at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park are now walking daily with their keepers as part of an exercise routine.

The young female chicks, hatched 26 and 28 days ago, need daily exercise to strengthen their feet and long legs and to gain balance before they can join the adult birds in the Safari Park’s African Plains habitat.

East African crowned cranes get their name from the tall, stiff, golden feathers that cover their head when fully grown. The young birds currently are light brown, but as they mature they will turn slate gray with dark gray to black primary and secondary feathers with chestnut markings. Their cheek patches will be white and red and they will stand approximately four feet tall.

East African crowned cranes are listed as an endangered species. The numbers and range of these birds have been reduced significantly over the past 20 years due to the loss, transformation and degradation of its habitat. These two crane chicks represent the 62nd and 63rd hatchings of this species at the Safari Park.

Chris Jennewein is founder and senior editor of Times of San Diego.