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Calgary Zoo opens Canada's 1st greater sage-grouse breeding facility

The Calgary Zoo has just opened the first captive breeding facility in the country to help restore the greater sage-grouse population, which experts estimate has fallen below 400 individuals.

Fewer than 400 of the endangered birds estimated to exist in Canada today

In the spring of 2016, it was estimated that the population of greater sage-grouse in Canada was between 250 and 350 individuals. (Calgary Zoo)

There's some good news for oneof Canada's most endangered birds.

The Calgary Zoo has just openedthe first captive breeding facility in the country to help restore the greater sage-grouse population, which experts estimate has fallen below 400 individuals.

"I see the greater sage-grouse as an iconic part of our Canadian heritage; a key component of our prairie ecosystem," said Axel Moehrenschlager, director of conservation andscience at the zoo.

The new facility will be able to accommodate the birds in three stages: breeding, incubation, and preparing for transition back into the wild again, says the zoo's Axel Moehrenschlager. (CBC)

Once commonly found in Canada's prairie region and the northwesternUnited States, the greater sage-grouse now inhabit just half their historic range, in part because of habitat destruction and human development.

"We had a workshopof experts here a couple of years ago that was predicting the species might go extinct in the country in two to five years," Moehrenschlagersaid.

One of the actions that was suggested to address that was to create a facility to breed the birdsso that they could bereintroduced into thethe wildand eventually help restore and reinforce the dwindling population.

The Calgary Zoo's breeding facility is located at the zoo's Devonian Wildlife Conservation Centre. (Calgary Zoo)

The zoo'snew 31,000-square-foot centre will not only breed and raise greater sage-grouse;it will also use cameras to monitor the birds and improve research into their incubation, survival and breeding.

In 2016, eggs were collected from Grasslands National Park in Saskatchewan and from birds relocated to Alberta from Montana. Today, the zoo's new facility houses 18 sage-grouse and ispart of the zoo's 10-year plan to help recover thatpopulation.