Wednesday, July 15, 2026

THE DEMOISELLE CRAN

 Demoiselle Crane - International Crane Foundation

The demoiselle crane (Grus virgo) is a species of crane found in central Eurosiberia, ranging from the Black Sea to Mongolia and Northeast China. There is also a small breeding population in Turkey. These cranes are migratory birds. Birds from western Eurasia will spend the winter in Africa while the birds from Asia, Mongolia and China will spend the winter in the Indian subcontinent. The bird is symbolically significant in the culture of India, where it is known as Koonj or Kurjaa.[3]

  Respecting demoiselle cranes at Akrotiri, Cyprus

The demoiselle is 85–100 cm (33.5–39.5 in) long, 76 cm (30 in) tall and has a 155–180 cm (61–71 in) wingspan. It weighs 2–3 kg (4.4–6.6 lb). It is the smallest species of crane.[4][5] The demoiselle crane is slightly smaller than the common crane but has similar plumage. It has a long white neck stripe and the black on the foreneck extends down over the chest in a plume.

 Guest List of Thousands: Demoiselle Cranes in Kheechan

It has a loud trumpeting call, higher-pitched than the common crane. Like other cranes it has a dancing display, more balletic than the common crane, with less leaping.

 Spectacular Demoiselle Cranes In Rajasthan - Yorkshire Coast Nature

The demoiselle was so named by Queen Marie Antoinette, for its delicate and maiden-like appearance.[6]

 Demoiselle Cranes:High-Flying Damsels: Roundglass | Sustain

The demoiselle crane is known as the koonj/kurjan in the languages of North India, and figure prominently in the literature, poetry and idiom of the region. Beautiful women are often compared to the koonj because its long and thin shape is considered graceful. Metaphorical references are also often made to the koonj for people who have ventured far from home or undertaken hazardous journeys.[7]

 Demoiselle Crane — WildArt.Works | Wildlife Photographer

The name koonj is derived from the Sanskrit word kraunch, which is a cognateIndo-European term for crane itself.[3] In the ancient story of Valmiki, the composer of the Hindu epic Ramayana, it is claimed 

 IDENTIFY DEMOISELLE CRANE - WWT SLIMBRIDGE

that his first verse was inspired by the sight of a hunter kill the male of a pair of demoiselle[citation needed] cranes that were courting. Observing the lovelorn female circling and crying in grief, he cursed the hunter in verse. Since tradition held that all poetry prior to this moment had been revealed rather than created by man, this verse concerning the demoiselle cranes is regarded as the first human-composed meter.[8][dubiousdiscuss]

 Pictures and information on Demoiselle Crane

The flying formation of the koonj during migrations also inspired infantry formations in ancient India. The Mahabharata epic describes both warring sides adopting the koonj formation on the second day of the Kurukshetra War.[9]

 The Demoiselle Crane - The Smallest Species Of Crane Around

 

Demoiselle cranes risking extinction were spotted in Amasya 


 
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 Range of G. virgo



  Breeding
  Passage
  Non-breeding



 In the village of Khichan, Rajasthan India
 

 
 

Near Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India 

 Demoiselle Crane Birds Migrate To Rajasthan, India from Mongolia during  Winter Time Stock Image - Image of habitat, anthropoides: 265130125

THE COMMON CRANE

 Photo - Common Crane - Grus grus - Observation.org

The common crane (Grus grus), also known as the Eurasian crane, is a bird of the family Gruidae, the cranes. A medium-sized species, it is the only crane commonly found in Europe besides the demoiselle 

 Sandhill Crane - Kaska Goose Lodge

 

crane (Grus virgo) and the Siberian crane (Leucogeranus leucogeranus) that only are regular in the far eastern part of the continent. Along with the sandhill crane (Antigone canadensis), demoiselle crane and the brolga (Antigone rubicunda), it is one of only four crane species not currently classified as threatened with extinction or conservation dependent on the species level. Despite the species' large numbers, local extinctions and extirpations have taken place in part of its range, and an ongoing reintroduction project is underway in the United Kingdom.[3]


 Common Crane - eBird

The first formal description of the common crane was by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Ardea grus.[4] The current genus Grus was erected by the French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760.[5] Grus is the Latin word for a "crane".[6]

 Cranes' Voices Across the Globe | BirdNote

The common crane is a large, stately bird and a medium-sized crane. It is 100–130 cm (39–51 in) long with a 180–240 cm (71–

 Common Crane, Noord-Holland, The Netherlands

94 in) wingspan. The body weight can range from 3 to 6.1 kg (6.6 to 13.4 lb), with the nominate subspecies averaging around 5.4 kg (12 lb) and the eastern subspecies (

 Wintering of cranes – record numbers along the Vistula River

 Males are slightly heavier and larger than females, with weight showing the largest sexual size dimorphism, followed by wing, central toe, and head length in adults and juveniles.[7]

 The demoiselle crane is slightly smaller than the common crane but has  similar plumage. It has a long white neck stripe and the black on the  foreneck extends down over the chest

This species is slate-grey overall. The forehead and lores are blackish with a bare red crown and a white streak extending from behind the eyes to the upper back. The overall colour is darkest on the back and rump and palest on the breast and wings. The primaries, the tips of secondaries, the alula, the tip of the 

 The demoiselle crane is slightly smaller than the common crane but has  similar plumage. It has a long white neck stripe and the black on the  foreneck extends down over the chest

tail, and the edges of upper tail coverts are all black and the greater coverts droop into explosive plumes. This combination of colouration ultimately distinguishes it from similar species in Asia, like the hooded 

 The demoiselle crane is slightly smaller than the common crane but has  similar plumage. It has a long white neck stripe and the black on the  foreneck extends down over the chest

(G. monacha) and black-necked cranes (G. nigricollis). The juvenile has yellowish-brown tips to its body feathers and lacks the drooping wing feathers and the bright neck pattern of the adult, and has a fully feathered crown. Every two years, before migration, the adult common crane undergoes a complete moult, remaining flightless for six weeks, until the new feathers grow.

A gray crane stands on one leg by the water. photo – Free Bird Image on  Unsplash 

 

It has a loud trumpeting call, given in flight and display. The call is piercing and can be heard from a considerable distance. It has a dancing display, leaping with wings uplifted, described in detail below.

 Common Crane | Audubon Field Guide The common crane breeds in Europe and across the Palearctic to Siberia.[1] By far the largest breeding populations can be found in Russia, Finland and Sweden. It is a rare breeder in southern and western Europe, with larger numbers breeding in the central and  

European Crane Profile | earlyalan90 away awhile | Flickr

eastern parts of the continent. It has reappeared in several western European countries where it had been extirpated as a breeding bird decades or even centuries ago, including the United Kingdom 

Britain's Common Crane population has hit a modern-day record. After  centuries of absence, Common Cranes are now raising chicks across restored  wetlands, with the national population reaching around 250 birds.🦩 News & and, since 2021, the Republic of Ireland.[9] In Russia, it breeds as far east at the Chukchi Peninsula. In Asia, the breeding range of the common crane extends as far south as northern China, Turkey and the Caucasus region.[1][10]

 Sarus Sunset! As the day softened into dusk, a Sarus Crane stood in quiet  contemplation, a moment that felt more like a pause in time than a  photograph. Some encounters aren't about

The species is a migrant and common cranes that breed in Europe predominantly winter in Portugal, Spain and northern Africa.[9] Autumn migration is from August to October in the breeding areas, but from late October to early December at the wintering sites. Spring migration starts in February at wintering sites up 

 Monitoring the not-so-common Common Crane in North East Scotland –  Scotland's Nature

 to early March,[10][11] but from March through May at the breeding areas. Migration phenology of common cranes is changing due to climate change.[12] Important staging areas occur anywhere from Sweden, the Netherlands and Germany to China (with a large one around the Caspian Sea) and many thousand cranes can be seen in one day in the Autumn. Some birds winter elsewhere in southern Europe, 

 Juvenile Sandhill Crane

 including Portugal and France.[9] During mild winters, some may stay near their breeding locations year-round, even in northwestern Europe.[13] Common cranes that breed in far eastern Europe, including European Russia, winter in the river valleys of Sudan, Ethiopia, Tunisia and Eritrea with smaller numbers 

 Wetland bird abundance rises along Great Lakes coast

in Turkey, northern Israel, Iraq and parts of Iran. The third major wintering region, primarily used by those breeding in central Russia, is in the northern half of the Indian subcontinent, including Pakistan. Minimal wintering also occurs in Burma, Vietnam and Thailand. Lastly, the easternmost breeders winter in eastern China, where they are often the most common crane.[14] Migrating flocks fly in a "V" formation.

 

 Sandhill Crane Birds Standing on Brown Grass Field · Free Stock Photo

It is a rare visitor to Japan and Korea, mostly blown over from the Chinese wintering population, and is a rare vagrant to western North America, where birds are occasionally seen with flocks of migrating sandhill cranes.

 Common crane, Grus grus - info, details, facts & images

In Europe, the common crane predominantly breeds in boreal and taiga forest and mixed forests, from an elevation of sea-level to 2,200 m (7,200 ft). In northern climes, it breeds in treeless moors, on bogs, or on dwarf heather habitats, usually where small lakes or pools are also found. In Sweden, breeders are usually found in small, swampy openings amongst pine forests, while in Germany, marshy wetlands are used. 

 But there isn't just one type of Sandhill Crane. 6 subspecies, from the  migratory Lesser and Greater that number in the hundreds of thousands, to  the non-migratory Florida, Mississippi and Cuban populations.

 Breeding habitat used in Russia are similar, though they can be found nesting in less likely habitat such as steppe and even semi-desert, so long as water is near. Primarily, the largest number of common cranes are found breeding in wooded swamps, bogs and wetlands and seem to require quiet, peaceful environs with minimal human interference. They occur at low density as breeders even where common, typically ranging from 1 to 5 pairs per 100 km2 (39 sq mi).

Common crane back on peatlands after going extinct in Ireland 300 years ago  – The Irish Times

The common crane is omnivorous, as are all cranes. It largely eats plant matter, including roots, rhizomes, tubers, stems, leaves, fruits and seeds. They also commonly eat, when available, pond-weeds, heath berries, peas, potatoes, olives, acorns, cedar nuts and pods of peanuts. Notably amongst the berries consumed, the cranberry, is possibly named after the species.[16]

Sandhill Crane | Amy's Bird Blog 

 Animal foods become more important during the summer breeding season and may be the primary food source at that time of year, especially while regurgitating to young. Their animal foods are insects, especially dragonflies, and also snails, earthworms, crabs, spiders, millipedes, woodlice, amphibians, rodents, and small birds.

 File:Sandhill Cranes in Shallow Water (24525292904).jpg - Wikimedia Commons

Common cranes may either forage on land or in shallow water, probing around with their bills for any edible organism. Although crops may locally be damaged by the species, they mostly consume waste grain in winter from previously harvested fields and so actually benefit farmers by cleaning fields for use in the following year.[17] As with other cranes, all foraging (as well as drinking and roosting) is done in small groups, which may variously consist of pairs, family groups or winter flocks.

 Crane | BTO - British Trust for Ornithology

This species usually lays eggs in May, though seldom will do so earlier or later. Like most cranes, this species displays indefinite monogamous pair bonds. If one mate dies, a crane may attempt to court a new mate the following year. Although a pair may be together for many years, the courtship rituals of the species are enacted by 

 Sandhill Crane and chick (Grus canadensis) - Height: 36-48 inches tall  (90-122 cm) - This gray bird is often stained with rust. Immature cranes  are browner.

every pair each spring. The dancing of common cranes has complex, social meanings and may occur at almost any time of year. Dancing may include bobs, bows, pirouettes, and stops, as in various crane species. Aggressive displays may include 

 It's the cutest time of year – baby animal season! Check out these adorable  baby sandhill cranes photographed by Department staff (Thanks, Heather!) at  Loxahatchee Slough Natural Area. Did you know that

ruffled wing feathers, throwing vegetation in the air and pointing the bare red patch on their heads at each other. Courtship displays begin with a male following the female in a stately, march-like walk. The unison call, consists of the female holding her head up and gradually lowering down as she calls out. The female calls out a high note and then the male follows with a longer scream in a similar posture. Copulation consists of a similar, dramatic display.

 Check out this adorable family. This pair of sandhill cranes is raising a  colt (the term for a sandhill crane chick) right here in Will County.  Sandhill cranes mate for life. The

The nesting territory of common cranes is variable and is based on the local habitat. It can range in size from variously 2 to 500 ha (4.9 to 1,235.5 acres). In common with sandhill cranes (and no other crane 

 Sandhill cranes mate for life, typically after 7 years

species), common cranes "paint" their bodies with mud or decaying vegetation, apparently in order to blend into their nesting environment. The nest is either in or very near shallow water, often with dense shore vegetation nearby, and may be used over several years. The size and placement of the nest varies considerably over the range, with Arctic birds building relatively small nests. In Sweden, an average nest is around 90 cm (35 in) across.

 Do Cranes Sleep? | Nebraskaland Magazine

 The clutch of the common crane usually contains two eggs, with seldom one laid and, even more rarely, 3 or 4. If a clutch is lost early in incubation, the cranes may be able to lay another one within a couple of 

 Local sandhill cranes stopping by for a snack this morning.

weeks. The incubation period is around 30 days and is done primarily by the female but occasionally by both sexes. If humans approach the nest both parents may engage in a distraction display but known ground predators (including domestic dogs (Canis lupus familiaris)) are physically attacked almost immediately.

 Grus grus - Monaco Nature Encyclopedia

New hatchlings are generally quite helpless but are able to crawl away from danger within a few hours, can swim soon after hatching and can run with their parents at 24 hours old. Chicks respond to danger by freezing, using their camouflaged brownish down to defend them beyond their fierce parents. Young chicks use their wings to stabilise them while running, while by 9 weeks of age they can fly short 

 Common crane spotted in Central Alberta April 19 2025

 

distances. The adult birds go through their postbreeding moult while caring for their young, rendering them flightless for about 5 to 6 weeks around the time the young also can't fly yet. According to figures of cranes wintering in Spain, around 48% birds have surviving young by the time they winter and around 18% are leading two young by winter. By the next breeding season, the previous years young often flock together. The age of sexual maturity in wild birds has been estimated at variously from 3 to 6 years of age.

 COMMON CRANE, GRUS GRUS - Artur Rydzewski nature photography

This species can live up to 30 or 40 years,[20] though the data on maximum longevity (43 years) and life expectancy (12 years, N=7 cranes) were published with captive cranes.[21] Common cranes living in the 

 Sandhill crane on one leg in Burnaby, BC Lake

 wild generally show shorter lives. Successful breeders, the best subjects in the population, are calculated to live on average 12 years.[22] Unsuccessful breeding cranes may have shorter lives. Elementary survival 

 Common crane spotted in Central Alberta April 19 2025

analysis with the Euring database[23] reports a life expectancy at birth (LEB) of c. 5 years.[24] This LEB of 5 years was similar to that estimated for other crane species, as for example the Florida sandhill cranes (G. canadensis) (LEB = 7 years).[25] Reports of tagged common cranes have increased rapidly in the last decades;[26] therefore, longevity and life expectancy at birth of wild common cranes is expected to be updated.Why Alberta needs better reasons to launch a sandhill crane hunt • Outdoor  Canada

 The species has however proved highly vulnerable to the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) outbreaks, with mass mortality of over 18,000 birds in Germany and 15,000–20,000 in France in autumn 2025.[27]

 Gujarat's common cranes' destination is 5,000 kms away in Siberia |  DeshGujarat

 The common crane is a fairly social bird while not breeding. Flocks of up to 400 birds may be seen flying together during migration. Staging sites, where migrating 

 Common cranes in nature

birds gather to rest and feed in the middle of their migration, may witness thousands of cranes gathering at once. However, the flocks of the species are not stable social units but rather groups that ensure greater safety in numbers and collectively draw 

 Wilding Profile: Common Crane

each other's attention to ideal foraging and roosting sites.[25] Possibly due to a longer molt, younger and non-breeding cranes are usually the earliest fall migrants and may band together at that time of year. During these migratory flights, common cranes have been known to fly at altitudes of up to 33,000 ft (10,000 m), one of the highest of any species of bird, second only to the Ruppell's Griffin Vulture.[26]

 Common cranes 'here to stay' after recolonising eastern England | Birds |  The Guardian

 

Cranes use a kleptoparasitic strategy to recover from temporary reductions in feeding rate, particularly when the rate is below the threshold of intake necessary for survival.[27] Accumulated intake of common cranes during daytime at a site of stopover and wintering shows a typical anti-sigmoid shape, with greatest increases of intake after dawn and before dusk.[28]

 Common Crane - Facts, Diet, Habitat & Pictures on Animalia.bio

There are few natural predators of adult cranes, although white-tailed eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla), Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata), eastern imperial eagle (Aquila heliaca) and golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) are a potential predatory threat to common cranes of all ages.[36][37][38][39][40] The crane has been known to counterattack eagles both on the land and in mid-flight, using their bill as a weapon 

 Common Cranes (Grus grus), also known as the Eurasian Crane. Local name:  Koonj These large, stately birds are prominent winter migrants to the  Indian subcontinent, arriving from their breeding grounds across temperate

and kicking with their feet.[16] Mammals such as wild boar (Sus scrofa), wolverine (Gulo gulo) and red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) are attacked at the nest. Herbivorous mammals such as red deer (Cervus elaphus) may also be attacked at the nest, indicating the high aggressiveness of the birds while nesting.[16] The determined 

 12 Places to Visit in Kutch,Attraction in Kutch,Kutch Sightseeing

attack of a parent crane often assures safety from predators including large mammals such as foxes, but occasional losses to predation are inevitable.[41] The carrion crow (Corvus corone) is locally a successful predator of common cranes' eggs, trickily using distraction displays to steal them. Other species of Corvus may also cause some loss of eggs, with common ravens (Corvus corax) also taking some small chicks.[42][43] Common cranes may loosely associate with any other crane in the genus Grus in migration or winter as well as greater white-fronted geese and bean geese.[16]

 BARRY the BIRDER: Alberta may join other prairie provinces hunting Sandhill  Cranes

 

been known to counterattack eagles both on the land and in mid-flight, using their bill as a weapon and kicking with their feet.[14] Mammals such as wild boar (Sus scrofa), wolverine (Gulo gulo) and red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) are attacked at the nest, Herbivorous mammals such as red deer (Cervus elaphus) may also be attacked at the nest, indicating the high aggressiveness of the birds while nesting.[14] The determined 

 Showcase: Sandhill Cranes - Bird Canada

 

attack of a parent crane often assures safety from predators including large mammals such as foxes, but occasional losses to predation are inevitable.[34] The carrion crow (Corvus corone) is locally a successful predator of common cranes' eggs, trickily using distraction displays to steal them. Other species of Corvus may also cause some loss of eggs, with common ravens (Corvus corax) also taking some small chicks.[35][36] Common cranes may loosely associate with any other crane in the genus Grus in migration or winter as well as greater white-fronted geese and bean geese.[14]

 

 Common Crane - Facts, Diet, Habitat & Pictures on Animalia.bio

In 2025, the global population was estimated to be about 500,000 individuals.[1] The vast majority of pairs nest in Russia, Finland 

Sandhill Cranes | WaterMatters.org 

(30–40,000 pairs in 2009[44]) and Sweden (c. 30,000 pairs in 2012[45]). On the fringes of its range, it has often become rare or 

 Florida Sandhill Cranes outside today. Why do some have red on their heads  and others don't? : r/birding

even been extirpated, but in several European countries this trend has been reversed and overall the European population is increasing

 Wild Sarasota: Sandhill cranes stand out! - UF/IFAS Extension Sarasota  County

In the early 20th century, it was considered rare in Poland, but gradually began to increase and this has accelerated since the 1980s. In 2010-2012, the Polish population was estimated to number 20-22,000 pairs.[39] Norway had 3-5,000 pairs in 2015 and Estonia had 5,800 pairs in 1999, with both increasing.[40][41] The German breeding population increased from 700 pairs in 1978 to more than 10,000 pairs in 2017, 

 Florida Sandhill Crane – Imagine Our Florida, Inc

which is still a fraction of the size of the numbers that once bred in the country. After having disappeared as a breeding bird decades earlier, the species began breeding again in France in 2000 and in 2017 there were more than 20 pairs. In Denmark, the common crane returned as a breeder in 1953, about a century after it had disappeared. Numbers remained extremely low, less than 5 pairs, until the 1990s when a rapid 

Sandhill Crane (Florida) | BirdspixBirdspix 

increase began; in 2022 there were at least 750 pairs in Denmark.[42] In the Netherlands, the species disappeared as a breeding bird centuries ago, but it returned in 2001 and by 2020 there were about 40 pairs in the country.[43] The common crane returned to the Czech Republic as a breeder in 1981 and by 2004 it 

 Corkscrew SIGHTINGS: Crane numbers swell as migrants join Florida's  resident population - Spotlight News Magazine

had increased to 35 pairs.[44] In 2009, the species again began to breed in Slovakia,[9] and in Austria it returned as a breeding bird in 2018 after having disappeared in 1885.[45] Although large numbers winter 

 Common Cranes (scientific name: Grus grus). In Pakistan, they are popularly  known as Koonj. Locations in Pakistan These birds are migratory. They  travel from Siberia to spend the winter in Pakistan. You

in Spain, the last breeding in the country had been in 1954. In 2017, a pair that had been released after being rehabilitated bred in Spain.[46] It was extirpated as a breeder from Italy around 1920 and Hungary by 1952, and it also used to breed in the Balkans; significant numbers still pass through these countries during migration.[9][14][47]

 Whooping crane with freshwater mussel | U.S. Geological Survey

In the United Kingdom, the common crane became extirpated in the 17th century, but a small and increasing population now breeds again in the Norfolk Broads[48] and a reintroduction began in 2010 in the Somerset levels. A total of 93 birds were released between 2010 and 2014 as part of the reintroduction 

 A whooping crane enjoys a fresh catch! Every winter, whooping cranes  journey to the Texas coast, settling in the estuarine habitats of San  Antonio bay. These wetlands, supported by freshwater from the

effort, and there are now 180 resident birds in the UK. In 2016, a wild crane was born in Wales for the first time in over 400 years.[49] In 2021, the British population had increased to 72 pairs.[8] In the Republic of Ireland, several visiting flocks were observed in the 2000s and in 2021 a pair managed to breed for the first time on the island in 300 years.[8]

 America's whooping cranes bounce back

 

The main threat to the species and the primary reason for its decline comes from habitat loss and degradation, as a result of dam construction, urbanisation, agricultural expansion,[50] and drainage of wetlands. Although it has adapted to human settlement in many areas, nest disturbance, continuing changes in land use, and collision with utility lines are still potential problems. Further threats may include 

Whooping crane | Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology  Institute 

persecution due to crop damage, pesticide poisoning, egg collection, and hunting.[51][52] The common crane is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.

 Common Crane - Facts, Diet, Habitat & Pictures on Animalia.bio

 In Ireland, despite being extinct for over 200 years, the common crane plays a very important part in Irish culture and folklore and so thus recent efforts to encourage it back to Ireland are received with much enthusiasm.

 Crane | Wading birds, migratory, long-legged | Britannica

The Kranich Museum in Hessenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany, is dedicated to art and folklore related to the common crane.

 Common Crane | Birdfact

The common crane is the sacred bird of the god Hephaestus,[53] and it features heavily in the god's iconography. In Indian states of Rajsthan and Gujarat this crane is described in lots of folk songs. For example: a newly married woman (whose husband has gone to a far away place for earning) will sing a song to crane to take a message to her husband and request to tell him to come home early.[citation needed]

 

What the Return of the Common Crane Tells Us About Restoring Nature – The  Hidden Benefits that Few Know About – Philip Lymbery


National Zoo's biology institute launches effort to save whooping cranes |  Headlines | insidenova.com

 

 

 
 
 
 

 The range of the common crane 

   Extant (non-breeding)

  Extant (resident)
  Extant (breeding)

 

 Migratory Routes of Common Crane | Download Scientific Diagram

 

Crane Bird Facts | Grus Grus