Looks like the newest taste treat in Michigan may be Sandhill Crane, the "Ribeye of the Sky." They are cool looking birds with a very unique call, but are a huge pain for farmers. When I lived in the southern part of the state huge flocks would land in cornfields and in some cases destroy them. Farmers can shoot them, I never would have thought about eating one.
Here are some quotes in an article in the Detroit Free Press by Keith Matheny. I would normally post a link, but you need to pay for a subscription.
It's Michigan's largest, oldest bird species, unchanged in more than 2.5 million years; a tall, graceful bird beloved by birdwatchers for its unique trumpeting song. It's also a major nuisance to farmers, devouring their freshly planted corn in the spring. And to hunters, it's known for its meat so tasty it's called the ribeye of the sky.
Sen. Ed McBroom, on Wednesday in the Senate Natural Resources Committee he chairs, introduced his resolution urging the state Natural Resources Commission, a seven-member, governor-appointed body that sets hunting and fishing policy in Michigan, to add sandhill cranes to the state's game species list, and seek U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service approval to establish a sandhill crane hunting season.
Under current federal rules, when farmers receive permission to kill sandhill cranes destroying their spring corn crops, they are disallowed from using the carcasses for meat."