Saving Trumpeter Swans of Yellowstone – Project Update

Image of Swans being released into the wild

One of the things I’m most excited about these days is the work the Ricketts Conservation Foundation is doing to support wildlife and wilderness areas.  And one of our most important current initiatives is The Swan Project, a multi-year partnership between The Ricketts Conservation Foundation and The Wyoming Wetlands Society to increase the number of Trumpeter Swans in the greater Yellowstone ecosystem.

Photos of Joe Ricketts Swan Project

The project kicked off in 2018 when we began the “Connecting the Dots” initiative.  There are close to 1,000 Trumpeter Swans in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, but they’re spread across a large area and act as separate subpopulations.  The idea was to jump start the connections between these subpopulations by introducing captive-raised birds in good habitat between existing subpopulations. 

As part of all this, we conducted aerial surveys of Trumpeter Swan habitat so we can now better monitor the population and locate our released birds. Recent flights have found new pairs of released birds in remote areas that would be difficult to access otherwise. These results confirm that the approach we’re taking is working!  It’s still early days of this ten-year project but these initial results give us confidence that The Swan Project will succeed in creating a single, interconnected population that will remain secure for the long term.

By working with another non-profit and several state and federal agencies, The Swan Project represents just the sort of private-public partnership I believe will be critical to the future of wildlife conservation while honoring our core belief that conservation is everyone’s responsibility.

The Swan Partnership

Image of People releasing swans into water

I like nature.  And I believe deeply in the importance of conserving our natural treasures.  So several years ago, I established the Ricketts Conservation Foundation.  The Foundation has pursued some exciting projects already, like helping to restore Wyoming’s Common Loon population.

Building on the success of the loon project, the Ricketts Conservation Foundation has also turned our focus to another species that might otherwise fall through the cracks:  the Trumpeter Swans in Yellowstone National Park.

The Trumpeter Swan population there has been declining for the past 50 years, despite being protected.  In 2012 the Wyoming Wetland Society, a small non-profit organization based in Jackson Hole, began releasing captive-raised birds in the park.  The idea was to increase the number of breeding pairs in Yellowstone. But to ensure these birds didn’t remain susceptible to the challenges that small populations face, they needed to be connected with a larger, regional population. And the best way to do that is to connect the Yellowstone birds with other successful reintroduction programs in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming.

So in 2018, the Ricketts Conservation Foundation and the Wyoming Wetland Society formed The Swan Project.  Working with federal, state and tribal agencies, The Swan Project’s goal is to connect the existing restoration populations of Trumpeter Swans in these three states by 2028. I’m excited about this project and believe it will help to ensure that Trumpeter Swans remain within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem for future generations to enjoy.