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A rare yellow northern cardinal spotted in Alabama in 2018 became an internet sensation and opened millions of people’s eyes to a spectacular power of genetic mutation. Now, Geoffrey Hill, an ...
The homeowner who first spotted the new yellow cardinal requested that her identity not be disclosed in this story to protect the bird, and her property, from unwanted attention.
A rare yellow cardinal has been spotted in Illinois by Chelsea Curry and her husband. Curry said they first noticed the bird last year and he often spends all day in their backyard. Chelsea Curry ...
Yellow cardinal calls Port St. Lucie home. Unless there’s another ‘one in a million’ bird in same neighborhood “Everyone is watching for the yellow cardinal,” an Auburn University ...
As it turns out, a one-in-a-million yellow cardinal had decided to make himself at home at the Currys’ bird feeders in rural Rushville, a quiet farm community 200 miles southwest of Chicago.
'Sunny' the yellow northern cardinal has taken the world by storm. Ever since the rare bird was photographed Oct. 12 in the backyard of Port St. Lucie home-school teacher Tracy Workman, images of ...
Only three yellow cardinal sightings are reported a year, making the bird's appearance a rare "one in a million" finding, Geoffrey Hill said.
Bird watchers have been observing a rare one-in-a-million yellow cardinal in a wooded teaching area at the UF campus in Gainesville.
Genetic mutation causing a northern cardinal to be yellow is a 1-in-10 million bird.
There are only 10-12 yellow cardinals in North America, and Chelsea and Richard Curry found one in their backyard.
Bird watchers have been observing a rare one-in-a-million yellow cardinal in a wooded teaching area at the UF campus in Gainesville.
Scientists estimate the male northern cardinal’s genetic mutation that makes it yellow also makes it a 1-in-10 million bird ...