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Peregrine Falcon

Pesticide Regulation and "Soft Release" Reintroduction

More than three decades after being placed on the endangered species list, the American Peregrine Falcon has made a remarkable comeback. A victim of reproductive failure due to the eggshell-thinning effects of DDT contamination, by the 1960s the bird's numbers had dwindled to the point that no nesting pairs could be found in the eastern United States, and it was fast diminishing elsewhere on the continent.

Fortunately, the banning of DDT in 1972 along with intensive conservation efforts led to the species' successful recovery. In 1999 the Peregrine Falcon was removed from the endangered species list ("delisted"), although it will continue to be monitored for several years, as required by law.

For more information on Peregrine Falcon, go to the species account in our Bird Guide.

Cornell Lab of Ornithology researcher and lifelong falconer Tom J. Cade (shown here with a juvenile Peregrine Falcon) founded the Peregrine Fund in 1970. Thus began an ambitious program to rear Peregrine Falcons in captivity and reintroduce them to the wild.

Using a variety of techniques (artificial insemination, artificial incubation of fragile eggs rescued from wild nests, fostering of nestlings by other raptor species, and eventually releasing young peregrines at natural or artificial nest sites), Cade's team and their collaborators around the country gradually boosted peregrine numbers such that natural breeding started to occur, allowing the population to recover.

In 1984 The Peregrine Fund relocated to help establish the World Center for Birds of Prey in Boise, Idaho, where its researchers are now helping to save threatened raptors and other birds worldwide, using captive-rearing and reintroduction methods similar to those developed for the Peregrine Falcon.