
Whooping Crane Pictures, Images and Stock Photos
Browse 470+ whooping crane stock photos and images available, or search for whooping crane usa or whooping crane vector to find more great stock photos and pictures.


whooping crane or grus americana bird wading with one leg raised in marsh

Scarce whooping crane, on the endangered species list, in a wetland setting.

A whooping crane in Florida looking right

Whooping Crane in a field in Southern Texas

Flock of cranes flying over yellow grassland against blue sky

Close up of an endangered Whooping Crane. This bird is in a refuge for ill or injured animals.

Whooping crane standing on tiny island in the marsh.

Whooping Crane in a field in Southern Texas

Whooping Crane in a pond trying to fly

Hunting in the Gulf coast tidal flats, a pair of endangered whooping cranes eat blue crabs in the tall grass in San Antonio Bay in the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, Texas.

Pair of the endangered whooping cranes walking through the reeds in a marsh.

Whooping Crane is the tallest North American bird and endangered.

Whooping crane bends to pick up a wolf berry

Whooping Crane (Grus Americana). Photographed by acclaimed wildlife photographer and writer, Dr. William J. Weber.

Scarce whooping crane, on the endangered species list, in a wetland setting. Sharp, large uncropped file.

Waders, waterfowl, feeding in the natural pond at birding center in Port Aransas, Texas

Endangered Whooping Crane standing in grass field.

Whooping Crane foraging in marsh

Whooping Cranes, Aransas, Texas, USA

Scarce whooping crane pair, on the endangered species list, in a wetland setting.

A Whooping Crane is standing in water.

Flying over a foggy Gulf coast close to the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, an endangered whooping crane flies with a GPS tracking device attached to his leg in Lamar, Texas.

Overview of the Whooping Crane Wetlands Habitat in Aransas National Wildlife Refuge in Texas

Hunting in the Gulf coast tidal flats, a pair of endangered whooping cranes eat blue crabs in the tall grass in San Antonio Bay in the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, Texas.

Whooping Crane by a Wetland Pond at the International Crane Foundation near Baraboo, Wisconsin

Today, there are 534 Whooping Cranes: 382 in the wild, 152 in captivity. A conservation success story as in the winter of 1942 there were only sixteen birds left.

Whooping Crane (Grus Americana). Photographed by acclaimed wildlife photographer and writer, Dr. William J. Weber.

One of the rarest birds on the planet the whooping crane.These birds are highly protected and most beautiful and graceful.

whooping crane or grus americana bird foraging in wetland area beak close to water

Whooping Crane in the Wetland Along the Gulf Coast in the Aranasas National Wildlife Refuge in Texas

This picture is made in my Home Studio.The stamp was designed by William Rowan and released in 1955.

Flying over a foggy Gulf coast and wild oak trees an endangered whooping crane glides over the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, Lamar, Texas.

6 animals on the endangered list are together in a wetlands scene.

Waders, waterfowl, feeding in the natural pond at birding center in Port Aransas, Texas

Scarce whooping crane, on the endangered species list, in a wetland setting.

Whooping Crane Watches Crab Fall Back Into the Bay

Whooping crane parents fore and aft as the family forages for food in marsh grass. The young crane, known as a colt, is safely in the center.