In February, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced it could safely consider kicking our country's national symbol off the federal Endangered Species List. Survivors of the banned poison DDT, the eagles' numbers soared from 417 nesting pairs in 1963 to 9,250 nesting pairs today.
More than 50 million bison roamed the North American prairies before cowboys headed West and hunted the population down to as few as 750 animals. In 1905, the American Bison Society conserved land for herds and introduced captively bred individuals whose descendents now number about 350,000.
The California condor's not winning any beauty pageants, but its rise from the ashes earns the largest North American bird a Top 10 spot. Its 1987 extinction in the wild make today's 125 free-flying birds a remarkable tale of nurture and nature.
Proclaimed extinct prematurely, the last 120 feral ferrets were discovered in 1981 after a Wyoming farm dog brought one home in its mouth. A decade later, a triumphant captive breeding program has released 2,300 ferrets into the wild.
Hunted to near extinction for its fur in the early 20th century, native Australian koalas are thriving in protective reserves. In fact, isolated populations and those on predator-free islands have reached pesky plague proportions.
Protection on the Endangered Species List is ending for the grizzlies. About 600 bears live near Yellowstone, up from 271 left in 1975. Populations are in such great shape, say experts some states, that they could become open game for hunting season.
Its flashy looks made this small-town frog a top-selling trinket in the international pet trade. The frog leaped back from near extinction with protection from collectors, captive breeding, and conservation of its little habitat in Surinam.
As the biggest fish in the coral reef at 700 pounds, fishermen have coveted a Goliath catch, forcing its population to crash in just 30 years. A 1990's fishing ban in the Caribbean has helped southern Floridian grouper youngsters rebound.