A California condor in flight with wings fully spread, for an article about California condor recovery on Yurok tribal land

California condors nest on Yurok land in the Pacific Northwest for the first time in over a century

For the first time in more than 100 years, California condors are nesting in the Pacific Northwest — and it’s happening on Yurok Tribe territory in Northern California, a milestone that wildlife biologists and tribal members have spent years working toward together. The confirmed nesting represents one of the most significant moments in California condor recovery since the species was pulled back from the brink of extinction in the 1980s, and it marks a profound act of ecological and cultural restoration for the Yurok people, who consider the condor — known as prey-go-neesh — a sacred relative.

At a glance

  • California condor recovery: Condors were completely extinct in the wild by 1987, when the last 27 individuals were taken into captivity. The species has since rebounded to more than 500 birds through intensive breeding and reintroduction programs.
  • Yurok condor program: The Yurok Tribe formally launched its condor restoration initiative in 2008 C.E., reintroducing birds to their ancestral range in partnership with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Yurok Wildlife Department.
  • Pacific Northwest nesting: The confirmed nest on Yurok Territory is the first documented condor nesting in the Pacific Northwest in over a century, representing a geographic expansion of the species’ recovering range into lands where condors had long been absent.

Why this matters for condors — and for the Yurok

The California condor is one of the rarest birds in North America. With a wingspan stretching nearly 10 feet, it is also one of the largest flying birds on the continent. The species feeds almost exclusively on carrion, playing a critical ecological role as a natural cleanup system that prevents the spread of disease in ecosystems.

For the Yurok Tribe — the largest federally recognized tribe in California — the condor is not merely a wildlife species. Prey-go-neesh carries deep ceremonial and spiritual significance, and its absence from Yurok skies was understood as part of a broader rupture between people and land caused by colonization, habitat destruction, and the near-total elimination of the condor’s prey base. Bringing the bird home is, in the Yurok framework, an act of healing that goes beyond ecology.

Yurok Wildlife Department staff and tribal members have monitored released condors closely, tracking their movements and health, and working to address one of the species’ most persistent threats: lead poisoning from ammunition fragments in carcasses left by hunters. That work continues, and it is largely because of sustained tribal stewardship on the ground that birds are now establishing themselves well enough to nest.

A century-long absence, now ending

Condors once ranged across much of North America. By the early 20th century, hunting, habitat loss, and poisoning had collapsed their populations dramatically. The Pacific Northwest lost its condors entirely, and for generations, the skies over Yurok ancestral lands went without them.

The Yurok Tribe’s restoration program, which received its first condors from the National Park Service and partnering zoos, was designed not just to release birds but to support a self-sustaining wild population. That means successful nesting — birds choosing a location, laying an egg, and raising a chick in the wild. Confirmed nesting in the Pacific Northwest signals that the reintroduced population is crossing a critical threshold.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has described condor reintroduction as one of the most complex wildlife recovery programs ever attempted. It requires coordinated action across multiple states, tribal nations, federal agencies, and private landowners. The Yurok program stands out for centering Indigenous ecological knowledge and tribal sovereignty alongside conventional conservation science.

Indigenous-led conservation is producing results

The Yurok condor milestone arrives at a moment when Indigenous-led conservation efforts are gaining broader recognition for their effectiveness. Research has consistently shown that lands managed by Indigenous peoples tend to support higher levels of biodiversity than comparable areas under conventional management — a pattern that reflects generations of accumulated ecological knowledge and long-term reciprocal relationships with specific landscapes.

For the Yurok, condor restoration is part of a larger vision that includes salmon recovery, forest stewardship, and the eventual removal of dams on the Klamath River — a project that, when completed, became the largest dam removal in U.S. history. These efforts are connected: healthy rivers support healthy prey populations, and healthy prey populations support condors and the full web of life the Yurok have long tended.

The Yurok Tribe’s condor program has drawn attention from Indigenous communities across the continent who are pursuing similar wildlife and habitat restoration efforts on their ancestral lands. The Pacific Northwest nesting confirms that the model is working.

What remains to be done

Success is real, but fragile. Lead poisoning from spent ammunition remains the single greatest threat to wild condors, and it is a problem that requires ongoing behavioral change among hunters — a cultural shift that is happening, but slowly. Condor chicks raised in the wild also face a range of hazards, from predation to microtrash ingestion, and the population remains small enough that each breeding pair and each surviving chick matters enormously to the species’ long-term viability. Wildlife managers are careful to note that confirmed nesting is not the same as confirmed fledging — the work of watching and protecting this nest is only beginning.

Still, the image of a condor nest on Yurok land — prey-go-neesh returning to a place where the Yurok have always said it belongs — carries a weight that population graphs alone cannot capture. It is a hundred years of absence beginning to end, one nest at a time.

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For more on this story, see: Mongabay

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