07 Jul 2026

Unlocking Condor Fertility Clues

Boise researcher Carolina Granthon found that egg size and female age are the strongest predictors of California condor fertility.

Decades of research on the California condor have revealed that egg size and the female’s age are crucial predictors of fertility, insights that are helping refine captive breeding programs at specialized facilities such as The Peregrine Fund’s World Center for Birds of Prey; by improving hatching success rates, these efforts strengthen global strategies to restore populations of this critically endangered species and highlight the broader importance of conserving large birds of prey whose ecological role is vital to healthy ecosystems.

The Condor Crisis and Recovery

  • California condors nearly went extinct in the 1980s, with only 22 individuals remaining.
  • Intensive conservation efforts, including captive breeding at The Peregrine Fund near Boise, have helped the population rebound to nearly 400 wild condors today.
  • Condors reproduce slowly, laying only one egg every other year, making each egg vital for species survival1.

Cracking the Secrets of Condor Eggs

Decades of breeding data from California condors have revealed that egg characteristics—particularly size—along with the female’s age play a decisive role in fertility outcomes. These insights are helping refine conservation strategies by improving hatching success rates, ensuring that each egg contributes more effectively to the recovery of this critically endangered species.

It was important to understand why some eggs fail to hatch despite advanced incubation technology and attentive care.

Data-Driven Insights

The research group determined 499 condor eggs laid between 1995 and 2024 at the propagation facility. The findings, published in Ornithological Applications (May 2026), revealed:

Implications for Conservation

Conclusion

This important research demonstrates how decades of meticulous data collection can yield actionable strategies for endangered species recovery. By linking egg size and female age to fertility, her work provides conservationists with practical tools to improve breeding outcomes and secure the future of the California condor.

Sources:

1. So many questions’: Using decades of data, Boise researcher works to help condors (2026).

2. California Condor Recovery Program (2026).

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