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Black-necked stork

The black-necked stork (Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus) is a tall long-necked wading bird in the stork family. It is a resident species across the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia with a disjunct population in Australia. It lives in wetland habitats and near fields of certain crops such as rice and wheat where it forages for a wide range of animal prey. Adult birds of both sexes have a heavy bill and are patterned in white and irridescent blacks, but the sexes differ in the colour of the iris with females sporting yellow irises and males having dark-coloured irises. In Australia, it is known as a jabiru[3] although that name refers to a stork species found in the Americas. It is one of the few storks that are strongly territorial when feeding and breeding.[4][5]

Black-necked stork
Male
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Ciconiiformes
Family: Ciconiidae
Genus: Ephippiorhynchus
Species:
E. asiaticus
Binomial name
Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus
(Latham, 1790)
Synonyms[2]
  • Mycteria asiatica Latham, 1790
  • Xenorhynchus asiaticus (Latham, 1790)

Taxonomy and systematics edit

 
Male in Darwin Australia

First described by John Latham as Mycteria asiatica, this species was later placed in the genus Xenorhynchus based on morphology.[6] Based on behavioural similarities, Kahl[7] suggested the placement of the species in the genus Ephippiorhynchus, which then included a single species, the saddle-billed stork. This placement of both the black-necked stork and saddle-billed stork in the same genus was later supported by osteological and behavioural data,[8] and DNA-DNA hybridisation and cytochrome–b data.[9] The genera Xenorhynchus and Ephippiorhynchus were both erected at the same time, and as first revisor, Kahl[7] selected the latter as the valid genus for the two species. This and the saddle-billed stork Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis are the only stork species that show marked sexual dimorphism in iris colour.[7]

Two subspecies are recognized E. a. asiaticus of the Oriental region and E. a. australis of south New Guinea and Australia.[2] Charles Lucien Bonaparte erected the genus Xenorhynchus in 1855 and placed two species in it, X. indica and X. australis.[10] This treatment was carried on into later works.[11][12] James Lee Peters in his 1931 work treated them as subspecies.[13] In 1989, McAllan and Bruce[14] again suggested the elevation of the two subspecies into two species: E. asiaticus or the green-necked stork of the Oriental region, and E. australis or the black-necked stork of the Australian and New Guinean region. This recommendation was based on the disjunct distributions and differences in the iridescent colouration of the neck which the authors suggested might reflect different behavioural displays. This recommendation has not been followed and a subsequent study did not find consistent differences in the colours.[15] Analysis of the cytochrome b mitochondrial sequences however showed significant genetic divergence.[9] The genetic distance of a stork presumed to be Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus asiaticus from a confirmed individual of E. a. australis was 2.1%, much greater than the genetic distances between individual storks of the same species. The conservative treatment as two subspecies has been followed in the Australian faunal list by Christidis and Boles.[16]

Description edit

 
Adult female in flight at the McArthur River in the Northern Territory of Australia

The black-necked stork is a large bird, 129–150 cm (51–59 in) tall having a 230-centimetre (91 in) wingspan.[1] The only published weight for this species was a single specimen at 4,100 g (9.0 lb), but this is nearly 35% less than the mean body mass of the closely related and similar sized saddle-billed stork. Therefore, this specimen of black-necked stork could have been at the low end of sizes attainable or perhaps somewhat malnourished.[2][15] The plumage patterns are conspicuous with younger birds differing from adults. Adults have a glossy bluish-black iridescent head, neck, secondary flight feathers and tail; a coppery-brown crown; a bright white back and belly; bill black with a slightly concave upper edge; and bright red legs. The sexes are identical but the adult female has a yellow iris while the adult male has it brown. Juveniles younger than six months have a brownish iris; a distinctly smaller and straighter beak; a fluffy appearance; brown head, neck, upper back, wings and tail; a white belly; and dark legs. Juveniles older than six months have a mottled appearance especially on the head and neck where the iridescence is partly developed; dark-brown outer primaries; white inner primaries that forms a shoulder patch when the wings are closed; a heavy beak identical in size to adults but still straighter; and dark to pale-pink legs.[17] Like most storks, the black-necked stork flies with the neck outstretched, not retracted like a heron. In flight it appears spindly and a black bar running through the white wings (the somewhat similar looking migratory black stork has an all black wing)[18] with black neck and tail make it distinctive.[19][20]

 

Distribution and habitat edit

In India, the species is widespread in the west, central highlands, and northern Gangetic plains extending east into the Assam valley, but rare in peninsular India and Sri Lanka.[21][22][23][24] This distinctive stork is an occasional straggler in southern and eastern Pakistan, and is a confirmed breeding species in central lowland Nepal.[25][26][27] It extends into Southeast Asia, through New Guinea and into the northern half of Australia.[2][15] Compared to other large waterbirds like cranes, spoonbills and other species of storks, black-necked storks are least abundant in locations that have a high diversity of large waterbird species.[28][29]

The largest population of this species occurs in Australia, where it is found from the Ashburton River, near Onslow, Western Australia, across northern Australia to north-east New South Wales. It extends inland in the Kimberley area to south of Halls Creek; in the Northern Territory to Hooker Creek and Daly Waters; and in Queensland inland to the Boulia area and the New South Wales border, with some records as far south as the north-west plains of New South Wales, along the coast of Sydney and formerly bred near the Shoalhaven River.[30][31] It is rare along the south-east extremity of its range, but common throughout the north. An estimated 1800 occur in the Alligator Rivers region of the Northern Territory, with overall numbers during surveys being low in all seasons.[28] A combination of aerial surveys and ground counts in the middle Fly River floodplain, Papua New Guinea estimated 317 (December 1994) and 249 (April 1995) storks.[32]

The largest known breeding population occurs in the largely agricultural landscape of south-western Uttar Pradesh in India.[4] Densities of about 0.099 birds per square kilometre have been estimated in this region made up of a mosaic of cultivated fields and wetlands.[29] About six pairs were found to use the 29 square kilometres of the Keoladeo National Park.[33] One breeding pair has been observed in Bhagalpur district, western Bihar.[34]

In Sri Lanka, the species is a rare breeding resident, with 4–8 breeding pairs in Ruhuna National Park.[35] It is exceedingly rare, and possibly no longer breeding in Bangladesh[36] and Thailand.[37]

Black-necked storks forage in a variety of natural and artificial wetland habitats. They frequently use freshwater, natural wetland habitats such as lakes, ponds, marshes, flooded grasslands, oxbow lakes, swamps, rivers and water meadows.[2][15] Freshwater, artificial wetland habitats used by these storks include flooded fallow and paddy fields, wet wheat fields, irrigation storage ponds and canals, sewage ponds, and dry floodplains.[2][15][5] Small numbers are also seen in Indian coastal wetland habitats, including in mangrove creeks and marshes.[24][38] In cultivated areas, they prefer natural wetlands to forage in, though flooded rice paddies are preferentially used during the monsoon, likely due to excessive flooding of lakes and ponds.[5] Nests are usually on trees located in secluded parts of large marshes[2][15][33] or in cultivated fields as in India and lowland Nepal.[27][4][34]

Behaviour and ecology edit

This large stork has a dance-like display. A pair stalk up to each other face to face, extending their wings and fluttering the wing tips rapidly and advancing their heads until they meet. They then clatter their bills and walk away. The display lasts for a minute and may be repeated several times.[39][40]

Nest building in India commences during the peak of the monsoon with most of the nests initiated during September – November, with few new nests built afterwards until January.[4] They nest on large trees, sometimes isolated in large marshes, or in agricultural landscapes, on which they build a platform. On agricultural landscapes, human disturbance can cause nesting adults to abandon nests in some locations, but storks in other locations nest successfully.[4][27][34] The nest is large, as much as 3 to 6 feet across and made up of sticks, branches and lined with rushes, water-plants and sometimes with a mud plaster on the edges. Nests may be reused year after year. The usual clutch is four eggs which are dull white in colour and broad oval in shape, but varies from one to five eggs.[18][40] The exact incubation period is not known but is suspected to be about 30 days. The chicks hatch with white down which is replaced by a darker grey down on the neck within a week. The scapular feathers emerge first followed by the primaries. Fledged young birds make a chack sound followed by a repeated wee-wee-wee call that has a ventriloquistic quality.[41] Adult birds take turns at the nest and when one returns to relieve the other, they perform a greeting display with open wings and an up and down movement of the head.[7] Food is brought for the young chicks by the adults and regurgitated onto the nest platform.[42] Adults stop feeding the young at the nest and begin to show aggression towards the chicks after they are about 3 or 4 months old. The young birds may stay on nearby for about a year but disperse soon. Typically one to three chicks fledge from successful nests, but up to five chicks fledge in years with high rainfall.[4][27][43][44] The number of stork pairs that succeed in raising chicks, and the average size of fledged broods, are strongly related to monsoonal and post-monsoon rainfall, improving in years with more rainfall.[44]

At the nest trees, which are typically tall with large boles and a wide-canopy, the birds in Bharatpur competed with Indian white-backed vultures sometimes failing to nest due to the vultures.[33] While many wetland birds are flushed by birds of prey, these storks are not usually intimidated[45] and can be quite aggressive to other large water-birds such as herons and cranes.[46] Adults aggressively defend small depressions of deep water against egrets and herons (at Malabanjbanjdju in Kakadu National Park, Australia[47]), and drying wetland patches against waterbirds such as spoonbills and woolly-necked storks (at Dudhwa National Park, Uttar Pradesh, India[48]).

The black-necked stork is a carnivore and its diet includes water-birds such as coots,[49][50] darters,[51] little grebes,[24] northern shoveller, pheasant-tailed jacana,[33] and a range of aquatic vertebrates including fish, amphibians, reptiles[19] and invertebrates such as crabs and molluscs.[18] They also prey on the eggs and hatchlings of turtles. In the Chambal River valley they were observed to locate nests of Kachuga dhongoka buried under sand (presumably by moistness of the freshly covered nest) and prey on the eggs of the turtle.[52] In Australia, they also forage at night feeding on emerging nestlings of marine turtles.[53] Stomach content analyses of nine storks in Australia showed their diet to contain crabs, molluscs, insects (grasshoppers and beetles), amphibians, reptiles and birds. The storks had also consumed a small piece of plastic, pebbles, cattle dung, and plant material.[54] In well-protected wetlands, both in Australia and India, black-necked storks feed almost exclusively on fish[47][48] but in the agriculture-dominated landscape of Uttar Pradesh in India they feed on a wider range of prey including fish, frogs and molluscs; storks obtained fish in wetlands, frogs from roadside ditches and molluscs from irrigation canals.[55] Although predominantly diurnal, they may forage at night, and have been known to forage on moonlit nights on sea turtle hatchlings on Australian beaches.[56]

They sometimes soar in the heat of the day or rest on their hocks.[42] When disturbed, they may stretch out their necks.[7] Their drinking behaviour involves bending down with open bill and scooping up water with a forward motion followed by raising the bill to swallow water. They sometimes carry water in their bill to chicks at the nest or even during nest building or egg stages.[7]

Like other storks, they are quite mute except at nest where they make bill-clattering sounds. The sounds produced are of a low-pitch and resonant and ends with a short sigh.[19] Juveniles fledged from the nests can occasionally call using a mildly-warbling, high-pitched series of whistles, accompanied with open, quivering wings. These calls and behaviour are directed at adult birds and are a display to solicit food, particularly in drought years when younger birds are apparently unable to find food on their own easily.[39][57]

Black-necked storks are largely non-social and are usually seen as single birds, pairs and family groups.[5] Flocks of up to 15 storks have been observed in Australia and India, and these possibly form due to local habitat conditions such as drying out of wetlands.[17]

The black-necked stork is the type-host for a species of ectoparasitic Ischnoceran bird louse, Ardeicola asiaticus[58] and a species of endoparasitic trematode Dissurus xenorhynchi.[59]

Status and conservation edit

The black-necked stork is widely scattered and nowhere found in high densities, making it difficult for populations to be reliably estimated. The Sri Lankan population has been estimated to be about 50 birds while the species has become very rare in Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. They may be extinct in the Sundaic region. The combined South and South-east Asian population is placed at less than 1000 birds. A 2011 study found the population in south-western Uttar Pradesh to be stable, although population growth rates may decline with an increase in the number of dry years or land use changes that permanently remove the number of breeding pairs.[44] The Australian population has been suggested to have about 20,000 birds, but the lack of systematic estimates has meant a wide variation in the guesses ranging from 10,000 to 30,000 birds. They are threatened by habitat destruction, the draining of shallow wetlands, disturbance at nests, overfishing, pollution, collision with electricity wires and hunting.[27][39][60] However, healthy breeding populations are found in unprotected and intensively cultivated agricultural landscapes (especially in south Asia) and cattle raising areas (as in north-east Australia). Suggestions abound in literature regarding Black-necked Storks requiring undisturbed wetlands, but these appear valid only in areas where hunting of wildlife is common (like in some countries in south-east Asia). Few breeding populations with high breeding success are known primarily due to lack of field work.[4] It is evaluated as near threatened on the IUCN Red List.[1]

In culture edit

 
A painting of a sub-adult by Shaikh Zayn-al-Din (c. 1780) made for Lady Impey, probably based on a bird in the menagerie at Calcutta

The Mir Shikars, traditional bird hunters of Bihar, India had a ritual practice that required a young man to capture a black-necked stork "Loha Sarang" alive before he could marry. A procession would locate a bird and the bridegroom-to-be would try to catch the bird with a limed stick. The cornered bird was a ferocious adversary. The ritual was stopped in the 1920s after a young man was killed in the process.[61] Young birds have been known to be taken from the nest for meat in Assam.[62]

In Australia, an aboriginal creation myth describes the origin of the bill of the "jabiru" from a spear that went through the head of a bird.[63] The Binbinga people often consider the meat of the bird as taboo and eating its meat would cause an unborn child to cause the death of its mother. The jabiru is known as "karinji" and is the totem of a group known as the Karinji people.[64]

The difference in iris colour among the sexes was noted in 1865 by A D Bartlett, the superintendent in charge of the collection at the Zoological Society of London. The similarity in this aspect with the African saddle-billed stork was noted by Bartlett and commented on by J. H. Gurney.[65] Charles Darwin who corresponded with Bartlett was well aware of this and used it as one of the examples of sexual dimorphism among birds.[66] John Gould in his handbook to the birds of Australia noted that the meat of the bird "... has a fishy flavour, too over-powerful to admit of its being eaten by any one but a hungry explorer."[67]

References edit

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  62. ^ Barman, R.; Talukdar, B.K. (1996). "Nesting of Blacknecked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Panidihing, Assam". Newsletter for Birdwatchers. 36 (5): 95.
  63. ^ . Australian Museum. Archived from the original on 14 April 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  64. ^ Spencer, B.; Gillen, F.J. (1904). The northern tribes of central Australia. Macmillan and co, London. pp. 197, 614.
  65. ^ Gurney, J.H. (1865). "A seventh additional list of birds from Natal". The Ibis. 7 (3): 263–276. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1865.tb05772.x.
  66. ^ Darwin, C. (1871). The descent of man and selection in relation to sex. Vol. 2. John Murray, London. p. 129.
  67. ^ Gould, J. (1865). Handbook to the birds of Australia. Vol. 2. Published by the author. p. 293.

Other sources edit

  • Maheswaran, G. and Rahmani, A. R. (2002) Foraging behaviour and feeding success of the black-necked stork (Ephippiorhychus asiaticus) in Dudwa National Park, Uttar Pradesh, India. J. Zool. 258: 189–195.
  • Maheswaran, G. (1998) Ecology and behaviour of Black-necked Stork (Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus Latham, 1790) in Dudwa National Park, Uttar Pradesh. PhD thesis, Centre of Wildlife and Ornithology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India.
  • Farah Ishtiaq, Sálim Javed, Malcolm C. Coulter, Asad R. Rahmani 2010 Resource Partitioning in Three Sympatric Species of Storks in Keoladeo National Park, India. Waterbirds 33(1):41–49
  • Maheshwaran G, Rahmani AR (2008). "Foraging technique and prey-handling time in black-necked stork (Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus)". Integrative Zoology. 3 (4): 274–279. doi:10.1111/j.1749-4877.2008.00101.x. PMID 21396077.

External links edit

  • New South Wales, Australia 26 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • BirdLife Species Factsheet

black, necked, stork, black, necked, stork, ephippiorhynchus, asiaticus, tall, long, necked, wading, bird, stork, family, resident, species, across, indian, subcontinent, southeast, asia, with, disjunct, population, australia, lives, wetland, habitats, near, f. The black necked stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus is a tall long necked wading bird in the stork family It is a resident species across the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia with a disjunct population in Australia It lives in wetland habitats and near fields of certain crops such as rice and wheat where it forages for a wide range of animal prey Adult birds of both sexes have a heavy bill and are patterned in white and irridescent blacks but the sexes differ in the colour of the iris with females sporting yellow irises and males having dark coloured irises In Australia it is known as a jabiru 3 although that name refers to a stork species found in the Americas It is one of the few storks that are strongly territorial when feeding and breeding 4 5 Black necked storkMaleConservation statusNear Threatened IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder CiconiiformesFamily CiconiidaeGenus EphippiorhynchusSpecies E asiaticusBinomial nameEphippiorhynchus asiaticus Latham 1790 Synonyms 2 Mycteria asiatica Latham 1790 Xenorhynchus asiaticus Latham 1790 Contents 1 Taxonomy and systematics 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 5 Status and conservation 6 In culture 7 References 8 Other sources 9 External linksTaxonomy and systematics edit nbsp Male in Darwin AustraliaFirst described by John Latham as Mycteria asiatica this species was later placed in the genus Xenorhynchus based on morphology 6 Based on behavioural similarities Kahl 7 suggested the placement of the species in the genus Ephippiorhynchus which then included a single species the saddle billed stork This placement of both the black necked stork and saddle billed stork in the same genus was later supported by osteological and behavioural data 8 and DNA DNA hybridisation and cytochrome b data 9 The genera Xenorhynchus and Ephippiorhynchus were both erected at the same time and as first revisor Kahl 7 selected the latter as the valid genus for the two species This and the saddle billed stork Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis are the only stork species that show marked sexual dimorphism in iris colour 7 Two subspecies are recognized E a asiaticus of the Oriental region and E a australis of south New Guinea and Australia 2 Charles Lucien Bonaparte erected the genus Xenorhynchus in 1855 and placed two species in it X indica and X australis 10 This treatment was carried on into later works 11 12 James Lee Peters in his 1931 work treated them as subspecies 13 In 1989 McAllan and Bruce 14 again suggested the elevation of the two subspecies into two species E asiaticus or the green necked stork of the Oriental region and E australis or the black necked stork of the Australian and New Guinean region This recommendation was based on the disjunct distributions and differences in the iridescent colouration of the neck which the authors suggested might reflect different behavioural displays This recommendation has not been followed and a subsequent study did not find consistent differences in the colours 15 Analysis of the cytochrome b mitochondrial sequences however showed significant genetic divergence 9 The genetic distance of a stork presumed to be Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus asiaticus from a confirmed individual of E a australis was 2 1 much greater than the genetic distances between individual storks of the same species The conservative treatment as two subspecies has been followed in the Australian faunal list by Christidis and Boles 16 Description edit nbsp Adult female in flight at the McArthur River in the Northern Territory of AustraliaThe black necked stork is a large bird 129 150 cm 51 59 in tall having a 230 centimetre 91 in wingspan 1 The only published weight for this species was a single specimen at 4 100 g 9 0 lb but this is nearly 35 less than the mean body mass of the closely related and similar sized saddle billed stork Therefore this specimen of black necked stork could have been at the low end of sizes attainable or perhaps somewhat malnourished 2 15 The plumage patterns are conspicuous with younger birds differing from adults Adults have a glossy bluish black iridescent head neck secondary flight feathers and tail a coppery brown crown a bright white back and belly bill black with a slightly concave upper edge and bright red legs The sexes are identical but the adult female has a yellow iris while the adult male has it brown Juveniles younger than six months have a brownish iris a distinctly smaller and straighter beak a fluffy appearance brown head neck upper back wings and tail a white belly and dark legs Juveniles older than six months have a mottled appearance especially on the head and neck where the iridescence is partly developed dark brown outer primaries white inner primaries that forms a shoulder patch when the wings are closed a heavy beak identical in size to adults but still straighter and dark to pale pink legs 17 Like most storks the black necked stork flies with the neck outstretched not retracted like a heron In flight it appears spindly and a black bar running through the white wings the somewhat similar looking migratory black stork has an all black wing 18 with black neck and tail make it distinctive 19 20 nbsp Distribution and habitat editIn India the species is widespread in the west central highlands and northern Gangetic plains extending east into the Assam valley but rare in peninsular India and Sri Lanka 21 22 23 24 This distinctive stork is an occasional straggler in southern and eastern Pakistan and is a confirmed breeding species in central lowland Nepal 25 26 27 It extends into Southeast Asia through New Guinea and into the northern half of Australia 2 15 Compared to other large waterbirds like cranes spoonbills and other species of storks black necked storks are least abundant in locations that have a high diversity of large waterbird species 28 29 The largest population of this species occurs in Australia where it is found from the Ashburton River near Onslow Western Australia across northern Australia to north east New South Wales It extends inland in the Kimberley area to south of Halls Creek in the Northern Territory to Hooker Creek and Daly Waters and in Queensland inland to the Boulia area and the New South Wales border with some records as far south as the north west plains of New South Wales along the coast of Sydney and formerly bred near the Shoalhaven River 30 31 It is rare along the south east extremity of its range but common throughout the north An estimated 1800 occur in the Alligator Rivers region of the Northern Territory with overall numbers during surveys being low in all seasons 28 A combination of aerial surveys and ground counts in the middle Fly River floodplain Papua New Guinea estimated 317 December 1994 and 249 April 1995 storks 32 The largest known breeding population occurs in the largely agricultural landscape of south western Uttar Pradesh in India 4 Densities of about 0 099 birds per square kilometre have been estimated in this region made up of a mosaic of cultivated fields and wetlands 29 About six pairs were found to use the 29 square kilometres of the Keoladeo National Park 33 One breeding pair has been observed in Bhagalpur district western Bihar 34 In Sri Lanka the species is a rare breeding resident with 4 8 breeding pairs in Ruhuna National Park 35 It is exceedingly rare and possibly no longer breeding in Bangladesh 36 and Thailand 37 Black necked storks forage in a variety of natural and artificial wetland habitats They frequently use freshwater natural wetland habitats such as lakes ponds marshes flooded grasslands oxbow lakes swamps rivers and water meadows 2 15 Freshwater artificial wetland habitats used by these storks include flooded fallow and paddy fields wet wheat fields irrigation storage ponds and canals sewage ponds and dry floodplains 2 15 5 Small numbers are also seen in Indian coastal wetland habitats including in mangrove creeks and marshes 24 38 In cultivated areas they prefer natural wetlands to forage in though flooded rice paddies are preferentially used during the monsoon likely due to excessive flooding of lakes and ponds 5 Nests are usually on trees located in secluded parts of large marshes 2 15 33 or in cultivated fields as in India and lowland Nepal 27 4 34 Behaviour and ecology editThis large stork has a dance like display A pair stalk up to each other face to face extending their wings and fluttering the wing tips rapidly and advancing their heads until they meet They then clatter their bills and walk away The display lasts for a minute and may be repeated several times 39 40 Nest building in India commences during the peak of the monsoon with most of the nests initiated during September November with few new nests built afterwards until January 4 They nest on large trees sometimes isolated in large marshes or in agricultural landscapes on which they build a platform On agricultural landscapes human disturbance can cause nesting adults to abandon nests in some locations but storks in other locations nest successfully 4 27 34 The nest is large as much as 3 to 6 feet across and made up of sticks branches and lined with rushes water plants and sometimes with a mud plaster on the edges Nests may be reused year after year The usual clutch is four eggs which are dull white in colour and broad oval in shape but varies from one to five eggs 18 40 The exact incubation period is not known but is suspected to be about 30 days The chicks hatch with white down which is replaced by a darker grey down on the neck within a week The scapular feathers emerge first followed by the primaries Fledged young birds make a chack sound followed by a repeated wee wee wee call that has a ventriloquistic quality 41 Adult birds take turns at the nest and when one returns to relieve the other they perform a greeting display with open wings and an up and down movement of the head 7 Food is brought for the young chicks by the adults and regurgitated onto the nest platform 42 Adults stop feeding the young at the nest and begin to show aggression towards the chicks after they are about 3 or 4 months old The young birds may stay on nearby for about a year but disperse soon Typically one to three chicks fledge from successful nests but up to five chicks fledge in years with high rainfall 4 27 43 44 The number of stork pairs that succeed in raising chicks and the average size of fledged broods are strongly related to monsoonal and post monsoon rainfall improving in years with more rainfall 44 At the nest trees which are typically tall with large boles and a wide canopy the birds in Bharatpur competed with Indian white backed vultures sometimes failing to nest due to the vultures 33 While many wetland birds are flushed by birds of prey these storks are not usually intimidated 45 and can be quite aggressive to other large water birds such as herons and cranes 46 Adults aggressively defend small depressions of deep water against egrets and herons at Malabanjbanjdju in Kakadu National Park Australia 47 and drying wetland patches against waterbirds such as spoonbills and woolly necked storks at Dudhwa National Park Uttar Pradesh India 48 The black necked stork is a carnivore and its diet includes water birds such as coots 49 50 darters 51 little grebes 24 northern shoveller pheasant tailed jacana 33 and a range of aquatic vertebrates including fish amphibians reptiles 19 and invertebrates such as crabs and molluscs 18 They also prey on the eggs and hatchlings of turtles In the Chambal River valley they were observed to locate nests of Kachuga dhongoka buried under sand presumably by moistness of the freshly covered nest and prey on the eggs of the turtle 52 In Australia they also forage at night feeding on emerging nestlings of marine turtles 53 Stomach content analyses of nine storks in Australia showed their diet to contain crabs molluscs insects grasshoppers and beetles amphibians reptiles and birds The storks had also consumed a small piece of plastic pebbles cattle dung and plant material 54 In well protected wetlands both in Australia and India black necked storks feed almost exclusively on fish 47 48 but in the agriculture dominated landscape of Uttar Pradesh in India they feed on a wider range of prey including fish frogs and molluscs storks obtained fish in wetlands frogs from roadside ditches and molluscs from irrigation canals 55 Although predominantly diurnal they may forage at night and have been known to forage on moonlit nights on sea turtle hatchlings on Australian beaches 56 They sometimes soar in the heat of the day or rest on their hocks 42 When disturbed they may stretch out their necks 7 Their drinking behaviour involves bending down with open bill and scooping up water with a forward motion followed by raising the bill to swallow water They sometimes carry water in their bill to chicks at the nest or even during nest building or egg stages 7 Like other storks they are quite mute except at nest where they make bill clattering sounds The sounds produced are of a low pitch and resonant and ends with a short sigh 19 Juveniles fledged from the nests can occasionally call using a mildly warbling high pitched series of whistles accompanied with open quivering wings These calls and behaviour are directed at adult birds and are a display to solicit food particularly in drought years when younger birds are apparently unable to find food on their own easily 39 57 Black necked storks are largely non social and are usually seen as single birds pairs and family groups 5 Flocks of up to 15 storks have been observed in Australia and India and these possibly form due to local habitat conditions such as drying out of wetlands 17 The black necked stork is the type host for a species of ectoparasitic Ischnoceran bird louse Ardeicola asiaticus 58 and a species of endoparasitic trematode Dissurus xenorhynchi 59 Status and conservation editThe black necked stork is widely scattered and nowhere found in high densities making it difficult for populations to be reliably estimated The Sri Lankan population has been estimated to be about 50 birds while the species has become very rare in Thailand Myanmar Laos and Cambodia They may be extinct in the Sundaic region The combined South and South east Asian population is placed at less than 1000 birds A 2011 study found the population in south western Uttar Pradesh to be stable although population growth rates may decline with an increase in the number of dry years or land use changes that permanently remove the number of breeding pairs 44 The Australian population has been suggested to have about 20 000 birds but the lack of systematic estimates has meant a wide variation in the guesses ranging from 10 000 to 30 000 birds They are threatened by habitat destruction the draining of shallow wetlands disturbance at nests overfishing pollution collision with electricity wires and hunting 27 39 60 However healthy breeding populations are found in unprotected and intensively cultivated agricultural landscapes especially in south Asia and cattle raising areas as in north east Australia Suggestions abound in literature regarding Black necked Storks requiring undisturbed wetlands but these appear valid only in areas where hunting of wildlife is common like in some countries in south east Asia Few breeding populations with high breeding success are known primarily due to lack of field work 4 It is evaluated as near threatened on the IUCN Red List 1 In culture edit nbsp A painting of a sub adult by Shaikh Zayn al Din c 1780 made for Lady Impey probably based on a bird in the menagerie at CalcuttaThe Mir Shikars traditional bird hunters of Bihar India had a ritual practice that required a young man to capture a black necked stork Loha Sarang alive before he could marry A procession would locate a bird and the bridegroom to be would try to catch the bird with a limed stick The cornered bird was a ferocious adversary The ritual was stopped in the 1920s after a young man was killed in the process 61 Young birds have been known to be taken from the nest for meat in Assam 62 In Australia an aboriginal creation myth describes the origin of the bill of the jabiru from a spear that went through the head of a bird 63 The Binbinga people often consider the meat of the bird as taboo and eating its meat would cause an unborn child to cause the death of its mother The jabiru is known as karinji and is the totem of a group known as the Karinji people 64 The difference in iris colour among the sexes was noted in 1865 by A D Bartlett the superintendent in charge of the collection at the Zoological Society of London The similarity in this aspect with the African saddle billed stork was noted by Bartlett and commented on by J H Gurney 65 Charles Darwin who corresponded with Bartlett was well aware of this and used it as one of the examples of sexual dimorphism among birds 66 John Gould in his handbook to the birds of Australia noted that the meat of the bird has a fishy flavour too over powerful to admit of its being eaten by any one but a hungry explorer 67 References edit a b c BirdLife International 2016 Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22697702A93631316 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22697702A93631316 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b c d e f g Elliott A 1992 Family Ciconiidae Storks In del Hoyo J Elliott A Sargatal J eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Vol 1 Lynx Edicions Barcelona p 463 Black necked stork jabiru parksaustralia gov au Archived from the original on 9 January 2024 Retrieved 9 January 2024 a b c d e f g Sundar K S G 2003 Notes on the breeding biology of the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Etawah and Mainpuri districts India PDF Forktail 19 15 20 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2011 a b c d Sundar K S G 2004 Group size and habitat use by Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in an agriculture dominated landscape in Uttar Pradesh India Bird Conservation International 14 4 323 334 doi 10 1017 S0959270904000358 Peters J L 1931 Check list of birds of the world Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts pp 1 345 a b c d e f Kahl M P 1973 Comparative ethology of the Ciconiidae Part 6 The Black necked Saddlebill and Jabiru Storks genera Xenorhynchus Ephippiorhynchus and Jabiru PDF Condor 75 1 17 27 doi 10 2307 1366532 JSTOR 1366532 Wood D S 1984 Concordance between classifications of the Ciconiidae based on behavioral and morphological data Journal of Ornithology 125 1 25 37 doi 10 1007 BF01652936 S2CID 32520110 a b Slikas B 1997 Phylogeny of the avian family Ciconiidae Storks based on cytochrome b sequences and DNA DNA hybridisation distances Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 8 3 275 300 doi 10 1006 mpev 1997 0431 PMID 9417889 Bonaparte C L 1855 Comptes Rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l Academie des Sciences Paris Vol 40 Paris Gauthier Villars p 721 Gray George Robert 1871 Hand list of Genera and Species of Birds in the British Museum Part 3 British Museum p 35 Sharpe R B 1899 A hand list of the genera and species of birds British Museum p 191 Peters J L 1931 Check list of the birds of the World Volume 1 Harvard University Press Cambridge McAllan I A W Bruce M D 1989 The birds of New South Wales A working list Biocon Research Group Sydney a b c d e f Hancock J Kushlan J A Kahl M P 1992 Storks Ibises and Spoonbills of the World Academic Press Christidis L Boles W E 2008 Systematics and taxonomy of Australian birds CSIRO Publishing Australia pp 105 106 ISBN 978 0643065116 a b Sundar K S G Clancy G P Shah N 2006 Factors affecting formation of flocks of unusual size and composition in Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Australia and India Emu 106 3 253 258 doi 10 1071 MU05014 S2CID 85338179 a b c Whistler Hugh 1949 Popular handbook of Indian birds 4th ed Gurney and Jackson London pp 502 503 a b c Rasmussen P C Anderton J C 2005 Birds of South Asia The Ripley Guide Volume 2 Smithsonian Institution amp Lynx Edicions pp 63 64 Baker E C S 1929 The Fauna of British India Including Ceylon and Burma Birds Volume 6 2nd ed Taylor and Francis London pp 326 327 Rahmani A R 1989 Status of the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in the Indian subcontinent Forktail 5 99 110 Maheswaran G Rahmani A R Coulter M C 2004 Recent records of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in India PDF Forktail 20 112 116 Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2012 Abdulali H 1967 On the occurrence of the Blacknecked Stork Xenorhynchus asiaticus Latham in the Bombay Konkan J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 64 2 367 a b c Sundar K S G Kaur J 2001 Distribution and nesting sites of the Blacknecked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 98 2 276 278 Roberts T J 1991 Birds of Pakistan Volume 1 Regional studies and non passeriformes Oxford University Press Karachi pp 104 105 Ghimire Prashant Khanal Chiranjeevi Bist Bhuwan Singh Panthee Shristee Sharma Basanta Ghimire Manshanta Poudyal Laxman Prasad 2017 Recent records of Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Nepal BirdingASIA 28 2017 59 60 a b c d e Jaiswal Kailash Kittur Swati Sundar K S Gopi 2019 Confirmed nesting of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in lowland Nepal BirdingASIA 31 88 90 a b Morton S R Brennan K G Armstrong M D 1993 Distribution and abundance of Brolgas and Black necked Storks in the Alligator Rivers region Northern Territory Emu 93 2 88 92 doi 10 1071 MU9930088 a b Sundar K S G 2004 Effectiveness of road transects and wetland visits for surveying Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus and Sarus Cranes Grus antigone in India PDF Forktail 21 27 32 Archived from the original PDF on 11 October 2008 Marchant S Higgins P J eds Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 1 Ratites to Ducks Oxford University Press Melbourne Bell H L 1963 Distribution of the Jabiru in south eastern Australia Emu 63 3 201 206 doi 10 1071 MU963201 Halse S A Pearson G B Jaensch R P Kulmoi P Gregory P Kay W R Storey A W 1996 Waterbird surveys of the middle Fly river floodplain Papua New Guinea Wildlife Research 23 5 557 569 doi 10 1071 wr9960557 a b c d Ishtiaq F Rahmani A R Coulter M C Javed S 2004 Nest site characteristics of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus and Woolly necked Stork Ciconia episcopus in Keoladeo National Park Bharatpur India J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 101 1 90 95 a b c Choudhary D N Mandal J N Mishra A Ghosh T K 2010 First ever breeding record of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus from Bihar PDF Indian Birds 6 3 80 82 Santiapillai C Dissanayake S R B Alagoda T S B 1997 Observations on the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in the Ruhuna National Park Sri Lanka Tigerpaper 24 7 11 Khan M A R 1984 Conservation of storks and ibises in Bangladesh Tigerpaper 11 2 4 Round P D Amget B Jintanugol J Treesucon U 1988 A summary of the larger waterbirds in Thailand Tigerpaper 15 1 9 Gadhavi Mayurdan Kukadi Devanshi Gokulakannan N Dar Shahid Talukdar Gautam Sivakumar K G V Gopi 2017 Records of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus from the coastal areas of the Kutch district of Gujarat India Forktail 33 135 137 a b c Sundar K S G 2005 An instance of mortality and notes on behaviour of Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 102 1 99 101 a b Hume A O 1890 The nests and eggs of Indian birds Vol 2 2nd ed R H Porter London pp 265 268 McCann C 1930 Nidification of storks J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 34 2 579 581 a b Ali S Ripley S D 1978 Handbook of the birds of India and Pakistan Vol 1 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 104 105 Sundar K S G Deomurari A Bhatia Y Narayanan S P 2007 Records of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus breeding pairs fledging four chicks PDF Forktail 23 161 163 Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2011 a b c Sundar K S G 2011 Agricultural intensification rainfall patterns and large waterbird breeding success in the extensively cultivated landscape of Uttar Pradesh India Biological Conservation 144 12 3055 3063 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2011 09 012 Baral HS 1995 Black necked Stork endangered Newsletter for Birdwatchers 35 4 74 75 Banerjee D P Bavdekar S P Paralkar V K 1990 Aggressive behaviour of Blacknecked Storks towards Cranes J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 87 1 140 a b Dorfman E J Lamont A Dickman C R 2001 Foraging behaviour and success of Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Australia implications for management Emu 101 2 145 149 doi 10 1071 MU00008 S2CID 82498317 a b Maheshwaran G Rahmani A R 2001 Effects of water level changes and wading bird abundance on the foraging behaviour of Black necked storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Dudwa National Park India PDF J Biosci 26 3 373 382 doi 10 1007 BF02703747 PMID 11568483 S2CID 23647616 Panday J D 1974 Storks preying on live birds J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 71 1 141 Verma A 2003 Feeding association of Marsh Harrier Circus aeruginosus and Black necked Storks Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Keoladeo National Park Bharatpur India Aquila 109 110 47 50 Kannan R 1986 Black necked storks feeding on a darter Blackbuck 2 3 33 34 Chauhan R Andrews H 2006 Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus and Sarus Crane Grus antigone depredating eggs of the three striped roofed turtle Kachuga dhongoka PDF Forktail 22 174 175 Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2012 Whiting S D Guinea M L 1999 Nocturnal foraging by the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus on sea turtle hatchlings Emu 99 2 145 147 doi 10 1071 MU99017B Clancy G P 2009 Ecology conservation and management of Black necked StorkEphippiorhynchus asiaticus Unpublished PhD thesis University of New England Armidale New South Wales Australia Sundar K S G 2011 Farmland foods Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus prey items in an agricultural landscape Forktail 27 98 100 Whiting S D Guinea M L 1999 Nocturnal Foraging by the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus on Sea Turtle Hatchlings Emu Austral Ornithology 99 2 145 147 doi 10 1071 MU99017B ISSN 0158 4197 Comway M 1991 Notes on the behaviour and food begging calls of a juvenile Black necked Stork Xenorhynchus asiaticus Australian Bird Watcher 14 1 29 Kumar P Tandan B K 1971 The species of Ardeicola Phthiraptera Ischnocera parasitic on the Ciconiidae PDF Bull Br Mus Nat Hist Entomol 26 2 119 158 Wahid S 1962 On a new trematode from a black necked stork Xenorhynchus asiaticus J Helminthol 36 1 2 211 214 doi 10 1017 S0022149X00022495 PMID 14004399 S2CID 36845003 Clancy G P 2010 Causes of mortality in the Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus australis in New South Wales Australian Field Ornithology 27 65 75 Archived from the original on 1 March 2011 Grubh B R Shekar P B 1968 Blacknecked Stork Xenorhynchus asiaticus and the marriage of Mirshikars Newsletter for Birdwatchers 8 3 1 2 Barman R Talukdar B K 1996 Nesting of Blacknecked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus in Panidihing Assam Newsletter for Birdwatchers 36 5 95 Emu and the Jabiru Australian Museum Archived from the original on 14 April 2010 Retrieved 11 June 2010 Spencer B Gillen F J 1904 The northern tribes of central Australia Macmillan and co London pp 197 614 Gurney J H 1865 A seventh additional list of birds from Natal The Ibis 7 3 263 276 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1865 tb05772 x Darwin C 1871 The descent of man and selection in relation to sex Vol 2 John Murray London p 129 Gould J 1865 Handbook to the birds of Australia Vol 2 Published by the author p 293 Other sources editMaheswaran G and Rahmani A R 2002 Foraging behaviour and feeding success of the black necked stork Ephippiorhychus asiaticus in Dudwa National Park Uttar Pradesh India J Zool 258 189 195 Maheswaran G 1998 Ecology and behaviour of Black necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus Latham 1790 in Dudwa National Park Uttar Pradesh PhD thesis Centre of Wildlife and Ornithology Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh India Farah Ishtiaq Salim Javed Malcolm C Coulter Asad R Rahmani 2010 Resource Partitioning in Three Sympatric Species of Storks in Keoladeo National Park India Waterbirds 33 1 41 49 Maheshwaran G Rahmani AR 2008 Foraging technique and prey handling time in black necked stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus Integrative Zoology 3 4 274 279 doi 10 1111 j 1749 4877 2008 00101 x PMID 21396077 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus Birds in my backyard Australia New South Wales Australia Archived 26 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine Images and videos 3D specimen BirdLife Species Factsheet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black necked stork amp oldid 1194507336, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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