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Zion National Park closes climbing cliffs to protect falcons

(Tom Wharton | The Salt Lake Tribune) The grounds in front of the Zion National Park Lodge were mostly empty Sunday on the second day of the government shutdown, though the lodge remained opened. Park services have been reduced because of a federal government shutdown that went into effect at midnight Friday after the Senate was unable to pass a new spending bill.

Springdale, Utah • Zion National Park in Utah is closing access to 13 popular rock-climbing cliffs as part of an annual effort to protect sensitive nesting sites for peregrine falcons.

The National Park Service officials announced this week that climbing routes will close March 1 while wildlife biologists to monitor nesting activity of the formerly endangered raptors.

Affected routes include Angels Landing, Cable Mountain, North Twin Brother, Mountain of the Sun and Tunnel Wall.

Officials plan to reopen sites that don't have nests by late April or early May.

Nest sites will be monitored until the chicks leave, typically in late July.

Zion is a sanctuary for the American peregrine falcon, a predatory bird that neared extinction in the 1970s but was removed from the endangered species list in 1999, after 20 years of recovery efforts.