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Once-endangered waterfowl now thriving in Wisconsin

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And in a captive-rearing phase of the project, cygnets were raised on ponds at GE Medical Systems in Pewaukee.

The ponds were closely monitored and, because they had been dug recently to serve as a source of water in case of fire at the complex, had no lead shot and were ideal for young swans. Lead shot is a source of poisoning in water birds and now is banned for waterfowl hunting.

As the trumpeters matured and dispersed around Wisconsin, they began nesting and raising their own young. The state’s recovery project had an initial goal of 20 breeding and migratory pairs of trumpeters; 44 were recorded in 2000.

Since then, through entirely natural reproduction of wild birds, the Wisconsin trumpeter population has grown about 6 percent annually, according to DNR records.

Unlike the nonnative mute swan and the most ubiquitous Wisconsin waterfowl, the mallard and Canada goose, trumpeter swans don’t prefer to nest in suburban or urban settings.

The big birds require more space and remote areas away from human activity.

Trumpeters generally need at least 8 to 15 acres of open water for security and at least 5 acres of shallow wetlands for feeding, according to a habitat study produced by the Wyoming Department of Fish and Game.

The wetlands should produce “extensive, luxuriant and diverse stands of submerged aquatic vegetation,” according to the study. Preferred food items include sago pondweed, arrowhead and wild rice.

Increasingly, trumpeters are found in central Wisconsin, such as the reservoir on the cranberry farm that produced five cygnets and one adult for banding in August.

Big and handsome, with an affable demeanor, the birds are a hit with volunteers and wildlife watchers.

The Natural Resources Foundation and DNR used the swan capture outings to assist with fundraising for the recovery project.

Volunteers paid for the opportunity to assist with the handling of the birds.

The banding project is ending as the trumpeters have reached new heights in the recovery program.

In 2012, biologists found 214 nesting pairs of trumpeters in Wisconsin, according to a DNR report. The mated pairs produced at least 373 cygnets.

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