With the many attempts and hard work put in, the success was sure to show, resulting in 16 whooping cranes that were reintroduced to the flyway in 2002. All things considered, the 20 of the original 24 cranes reintroduced, have found a way to survive and adapt into the wild (Species Status and Fact Sheet. Whooping Crane, 2014). Now today at the present time (WCRP) the whooping crane recovery plan, is known for the protection and enhancement of the breeding, migration, and the wintering habitat for the Aransas Wood Buffalo population of the whooping cranes. With having time to brainstorm, a course of action was put in place, which would include to radio 60 cranes through 2010 2013. As well as, the partnership of 2008, that included the first rounds of data collected in 2009, when whooping cranes were captured at the wintering grounds at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, located in south Texas, along with breeding sites at Wood Buffalo National Park in Canada. Harner (2013) states that “of these captured cranes, 35 to 40 of them have transmitters, with technology that was thoroughly researched on sand hill cranes, before being used on whooping