These ‘eggs’ are spying on whooping cranes to boost survival

In this March 6, 2018, photo provided by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, a data logger egg is seen at left and a real whooping crane egg at right, in Allen Parish, La. State wildlife biologists swap egg-shaped data loggers for one of the two eggs that many cranes lay. The real eggs come to Audubon Nature Institute, where they’re incubated until they’re nearly ready to hatch. Then biologists return the real eggs to their home nests and take back the fakes, which give up their data through an infrared connection. The Spy eggs may help Louisiana biologists learn why some whooping crane chicks die in the egg, while others hatch. (Eva Szyszkoski/Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries via AP)

In this March 6, 2018 photo provided by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, a data logger egg is seen at left and a real whooping crane egg at right, in Allen Parish, La. Spy eggs may help Louisiana biologists learn why some whooping crane chicks die in the egg, while others hatch. State biologists swap egg-shaped data loggers for one of the two eggs that many cranes lay. The real eggs are incubated at Audubon Nature Institute until they’re nearly ready to hatch. Then biologists swap them back. The fakes give up their data through an infrared connection. (Eva Szyszkoski/Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries via AP)

In this March 13, 2019 photo provided by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, and taken by a trail cam, biologist Eva Szyszkoski uses brooms to fend off a pair of nesting whooping cranes, so biologist Sara Zimorski, right, can replace a data logging egg with the cranes’ real egg in Jefferson Davis, La. Spy eggs may help Louisiana biologists learn why some whooping crane chicks die in the egg, while others hatch. State biologists swap egg-shaped data loggers for one of the two eggs that many cranes lay. The real eggs are incubated at Audubon Nature Institute until they’re nearly ready to hatch. Then biologists swap them back. The fakes give up their data through an infrared connection. (Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries via AP)

NEW ORLEANS — Scientists are using fake eggs to spy on whooping cranes in hopes of learning why some chicks die in the egg, while others hatch.

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