The black-necked crane (Grus nigricollis) is a medium-sized crane in Asia that breeds on the Tibetan Plateau and remote parts of India and Bhutan.
It is 139 cm (55 in) long with a 235 cm (7.8 ft) wingspan, and it
weighs 5.5 kg (12 lbs). It is whitish-gray, with a black head, red crown
patch, black upper neck and legs, and white patch to the rear of the
eye. It has black primaries and secondaries. Both sexes are similar.
Some populations are known to make seasonal movements. It is revered in Buddhist traditions and culturally protected across much of its range. A festival in Bhutan celebrates the bird while the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir considers it as the state bird.
Description
This
medium-sized crane is mostly grey with a black head and neck. The lores
and crown are naked and dull red. A small patch of white feathers are
present below and behind the eye. The tail is black and makes it easy to
distinguish at a distance from the similar looking common crane which has grey tail.[2]
Distribution and habitat
Copy of an illustration in Nikolai Przhevalsky's work where he gave the species its binomial name
The black-necked crane summers mainly in the high altitude Tibetan
Plateau. The breeding areas are alpine meadows, lakeside and riverine
marshes and river valleys. They also make use of barley and wheat fields
in these areas. Wintering areas tend to be in sheltered valleys or
lower altitudes. The largest populations are in China with smaller
numbers extending into Vietnam, Bhutan and India.[3] Small populations have been noted in northern Sikkim.[4] A small group of 20 to 40 was once known to regularly visit the Subansiri area in the Apa Tani valley[5] until 1975[6] and vagrants have been recorded in Nepal.[7]
In 1996 there were about 4,000 of the birds, most of whom spent their winters in Tibet in the valleys of the Nyanga, Lhasa and Pengbo rivers and the middle reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo.[8]
The Hutoushan Reservoir
in the Pengbo valley is an important winter resting place, with a 96
square kilometres (37 sq mi) Linzhou Black-necked Crane Preservation
Zone established in 1993.[9]
Black-necked cranes also winter in small numbers in two valleys of western Arunachal Pradesh, India. These are Sangti and Zemithang.[10][11][12]
Behaviour and ecology
Black-necked cranes forage on the ground in small groups, often with one
bird acting as a sentinel. In winter, the groups arrive and leave the
feeding grounds together, but may split into family groups, each group
keeping their own small feeding territories in a big marshes or fields.[6] They spend nearly 75% of the day foraging with peak feeding in the early morning and late afternoon.[3]
While foraging, they keep walking and they also walk long distances
between the feeding spots. In this manner, they cover several kilometers
a day while foraging.[13]
They feed on the tubers of sedges, plant roots, earthworms, insects and
other invertebrates, frogs and other small vertebrates. They may also
feed on fallen grains of barley, oats and buckwheat and will sometimes
dig up and feed on potatoes, carrots and turnips.[3][14] Their loud trumpeting calls are similar to those of other cranes.[2]
A 1938 photograph of a flock in the Brahmaputra valley
These birds are very wary, but in some areas they are accustomed to the
local people who do not disturb them. These cranes appear to be able to
distinguish people in traditional dress and are especially wary of
others.[13]
Like
many other crane species, they are believed to form long-lasting pair
bonds and dancing displays are made during the breeding season. The
breeding birds are territorial and will chase away any intruders of the
same species immediately, though they are generally tolerant of other
species.[13] The nest site is usually a pre-existing mud island inside a large shallow wetland, sometimes shared along with bar-headed goose.
The nest varies from a scantily lined scratch in the ground to a
structure made of grass, rushes and weeds with a depression in the
centre, sometimes the eggs laid directly on the grass without any
structure.[15][16] Eggs are laid mainly in May and June. One or two eggs.[2][17]
The birds are relatively more wary when the young ones are small. Till
the time when the young ones are able to fly, the family kept moving
around the nesting location, but later the family started traveling far
and wide in the course of a day. Though the young ones are able to
forage independently, usually they accompany the parents during
foraging. Short, subdued nasal "kurrr" calls are used by the family to
keep in contact and also by adults to indicate availability of food to
juveniles. The adults were found to feed the young ones mainly with fish
in Ladakh, adults fishing like herons.[13] They are endangered because of the hunters.
Status and threats
A couple of black-necked Tibetan cranes spotted in 2013 near Yamdrok Lake, Tibet Autonomous Region
The estimated population of the black-necked crane is between 8800
and 11000 individuals. These birds are legally protected in China, India
and Bhutan. However habitat modification, drying of lakes and
agriculture are threats to the populations. In many areas, dogs
belonging to herders are a major threat to young birds. An incident of
leopards preying on the roosting cranes during the night has been
recorded from the Phobjika valley of Bhutan.[18] In Bhutan Collisions with power lines has been another cause of mortality in some areas.[1][19] Eggs may also be preyed on by ravens that may use the opportunity provided when humans disturb the parents.[3]
The drying of wetlands can cause increased accessibility of the nests
leading to predation while a rise in the water level can submerge nests.[20]
Loss and degradation of habitat are the main threats facing the
black-necked cranes. The problems are most serious in the wintering
areas, where wetlands are extensively affected by human activity
including irrigation, dam construction, draining, and grazing pressure.
In Tibet, widespread changes in traditional agricultural practices have
reduced the availability of waste barley and spring wheat.[20]
Populations in Bhutan are well protected both culturally and legally although some disturbance from tourism exists.[21]
The black-necked crane is evaluated as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.[1] It is listed on Appendix I of CITES.
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