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Ben Shepard, in the first week of his summer internship with the Texas Parks and
The Texas A&M-Corpus Christi student was in a boat on May 23, surveying the birds on
the islands of Lavaca Bay, about halfway between Houston and Corpus Christi, when he saw the
pink, five-foot-tall bird about 100 yards away among a flock of sea gulls.
He peered through his binoculars to get a better look, and his eyes weren’t failing him —
yep, that was a flamingo with an unmistakable tag just above one of its knees.
“I’m no expert, but I’m pretty sure flamingos aren’t native to Texas,” he said to his
They are not. They generally can’t be found in the United States except for a few
Mr. Shepard had the rare pleasure of spotting No. 492, an African flamingo that, for more
than a decade, has shown you can still survive when no one gets around to clipping your wings.
If this were a Pixar movie — and when you read on you may agree that it should be — it
would begin its flashback sequence in the summer of 2003, when a flock of 40 flamingos from
Tanzania were imported to the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kan. Less than a year later in
they would have been kept flightless by essentially amputating a part of the wing in which they
had not yet developed sensation, before the bone was formed. But the birds came to the zoo as
adults, probably around 3 years old, and the institution considered the practice unethical for birds
of their age.
Instead, adult birds are kept grounded by feather clipping, which Mr. Newland called “no
different than you or I getting a haircut.” It must be repeated each year, as birds molt their
In June 2005, on a very windy day in Wichita, a guest reported seeing two flamingos out
of their enclosure. No. 492 and No. 347 had flown out; the staff had missed the signs that their
Each attempt to approach the flamingos spooked them. Soon they flew away to a
drainage canal on the western side of Wichita, where they remained under observation of park
They couldn’t get closer than 50 yards away from the birds, and were stumped on how to
get them back. Perhaps they could try in the cover of night, using a spotlight to disorient them.
No. 492, an African flamingo, was seen with a Caribbean flamingo in Texas as early as
2006 and as recently as 2013. “They’re two lonely birds in kind of a foreign habitat,” said Scott
Newland, the curator of birds at the Kansas zoo where No. 492 escaped.
They never got the chance. July 3 brought a terrible thunderstorm. And on July 4 —
Independence Day, a detail maybe a little too on the nose for the Pixar movie — the birds were
gone.
For unknown reasons, the flamingos went their separate ways. No. 347 flew north, and
was spotted in Michigan’s AuTrain Lake in August 2005. The bird was never seen again, and
But No. 492 flew south to Texas, where it found an environment that would suit it well.
“As long as they have these shallow, salty types of wetlands they can be pretty resilient,”
said Felicity Arengo, a flamingo expert at the American Museum of Natural History.
Flamingos are a social species that love each other’s company, and No. 492 went off on
its own. When a flamingo at the zoo needs medical attention, the keepers will isolate three or
four together so the injured bird is more comfortable than it would be alone, Mr. Newland said.
Even seeing its own reflection in a mirror can calm a flamingo down.
But great fortune was ahead for No. 492. Soon after it arrived in Texas, it found an
unlikely companion: a Caribbean flamingo that, Mr. Newland speculates, may have been blown
into the Gulf during a tropical storm. They were seen together as early as 2006 and as recently as
2013.
“Even though they’re two different species, they are enough alike that they would have
been more than happy to see each other,” he said. “They’re two lonely birds in kind of a foreign
habitat. They’re not supposed to be there, so they have stayed together because there’s a bond.”
Though they’re often referred to as mates, no one knows the sex of either bird. And Mr.
Newland said the fact that they’re roughly the same height suggests they’re likely to be the same
sex.
Whether they’re best friends or mates, they weren’t together when Mr. Shepard spotted
No. 492 in May. It raised the question: Could the Caribbean flamingo have died? Is No. 492
alone again?
Maybe, but Ms. Arengo said there are other explanations. They could have naturally gone
their separate ways — a breakup similar to the one with No. 347. Or the other flamingo could
have been nearby but out of sight, set to reunite with No. 492 later.
“It’s possible they’re separated and will show up back together again,” she said.
Either way, Mr. Newland said No. 492 could live another 10 to 20 years. Predators
include foxes and bobcats, but since flamingos pose little threat to humans and are not
considered game birds, No. 492 likely doesn’t have to worry about hunters. Mr. Newland
estimated No. 492’s age to be 20, and flamingos in the wild can live into their 40s.
Flamingo escapes from zoos are rare, but not unprecedented. In 1988, a flamingo named
Pink Floyd escaped from a zoo in Utah, and was occasionally spotted until it was believed to
The escape wasn’t the proudest day for the Sedgwick County Zoo, but Mr. Newland said
No. 492 would be just fine. It speaks to conservation efforts elsewhere that the flamingo could
“It’s less about animals escaping from a zoo than how resilient the animals on our planet
are,” he said.