Photograph by Margaret Smith
2026 TTSS News Archive
News Highlights from 2026
Zoos have supported and been involved in trumpeter swan conservation initiatives for decades. It started in the 1960's when trumpeter swans were brought to zoos from Montana’s Red Rocks Lakes area. In the 1990’s, it included egg collection in Alaska and raising cygnets for programs in the Midwest and Ontario.
You will learn how zoo swans were used in the Iowa swan restoration and are being used in the Oregon Restoration Program. Two short videos show how eggs were collected in Alaska, and how young swans are rounded up at Zoo Idaho and then released into the Oregon wild.
In addition to restoration, zoos have been involved in education and research efforts, promoting the importance of protecting wetlands for the species that call them home. The webinar has many creative ideas for education and outreach.
Jan. 29, 2026
"Thank you to everyone on this webinar for providing so much info. It was great. I am currently a volunteer at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and provide guests with info on the swans."
"If you’ve ever rounded a bend in a Wyoming river on a frosty morning and suddenly found yourself face to face with a bird that looks like it belongs on a medieval coat of arms, congratulations—you may have met the Trumpeter Swan. Towering, snow-white, and impossibly elegant, this is the largest waterfowl in the world, a bird so impressive it seems almost mythical. Yet its story in the West is one of grit, recovery, and a whole lot of wetland real estate.
Trumpeter Swans (Cygnus buccinator) once ruled wetlands across much of North America, from Alaska to the Great Plains and into the northern Rockies. By the early 1900s, however, market and subsistence hunting had pushed them to the brink. By the time conservationists took stock, fewer than a couple hundred birds clung to survival near Yellowstone and in interior Canada.
Fast forward to modern Wyoming, and the picture—while still delicate—is far brighter. These swans are now managed as part of the Rocky Mountain Population (RMP) under the Pacific Flyway. Though a Tri-State Area flock was once considered for Endangered Species Act listing, federal biologists ultimately decided it didn’t qualify as a separate Distinct Population Segment. Translation: the birds stayed protected, but their recovery would depend on smart management rather than emergency listing...."Trumpeter Swans are living proof that conservation can work—even for a species once nearly erased from the map. Spotting one gliding across a Wyoming wetland isn’t just a wildlife sighting; it’s a glimpse of a hard-won recovery still unfolding. Big bird, big wings, big story—and Wyoming is right in the middle of it.
Read more...
ARKANSAS: "Each winter, hundreds of massive white trumpeter swans migrate to Magness Lake near Heber Springs, making the area one of Arkansas’ most unique and popular wildlife viewing destinations. The swans typically arrive around Thanksgiving and remain through Valentine’s Day, offering visitors a rare chance to see North America’s largest waterfowl up close." Read more...
IOWA: "owa’s trumpeter swans attempted a modern-day record 158 nests in 2025, which is an increase of 17% over 2022. The nesting data is from the most recent statewide observation survey completed in December.
“It’s a neat story about the restoration. We spent a lot of time and effort to get the population established and its really taking off right now,” said Orrin Jones, state waterfowl biologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR).
Recovery has taken time, but is a true modern-day conservation success story, he said.
The restoration effort was supported by the Iowa DNR’s Fish and Wildlife Trust Fund; a constitutionally protected fund where hunting, fishing and trapping license fees are deposited and used, in part, to protect, restore, or manage fish and wildlife.
The largest waterfowl in North America, trumpeter swans have come a long way since the 1930s, when conservation efforts began in order to protect small populations in Montana and Alaska." Listen to the article
