PRINCETON — Just before sunrise Wednesday, it was quiet in the marshy area at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge where sandhill cranes congregated for the night.
As the cloudy sky started to lighten, the still of the morning transitioned to a whirring cacophony of trumpeting, rattling and honking as the cranes awoke. Some took flight to go scour nearby fields for corn left over from the fall harvest.
Despite the near-freezing temperatures and icy wetlands, about 10,000 cranes roosted overnight at the refuge, which is a popular stop on the birds' migration from Canada to Florida and other southern states. That number was far less than what spotters saw last week when a record-breaking 29,300 cranes roosted at the refuge — the highest number since the last record count of nearly 15,000 in 2019.
"It's a powerful sight to see that many birds in one place," said Cody Carlstrom, wildlife biologist at the refuge. "They're such an iconic species. They're practically prehistoric."
Sandhill cranes are one of the oldest bird species in the world. They stand about five feet tall with gray plumage and a red crown on their head. Even more distinctive than their leggy bodies and broad wings are their high-pitched rattle calls.
The sandhill cranes at Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge are eastern population cranes. The midcontinent population, which can be hunted due to their higher numbers, are a different breeding population and are known to congregate in Nebraska in the spring.
Carlstrom estimates there are only about 100,000 eastern population cranes compared to about 600,000 midcontinent population cranes. But 100,000 is a mighty improvement from a century ago when cranes were nearly hunted to extinction. Hunting was outlawed by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.
"They're a really good success story," said Bruce Galer of Elk River, who is a member of the nonprofit Friends of the Sherburne National Wildlife Refuge, a group of about 600 volunteers that support the refuge financially and through volunteer work.