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Siberian crane

The Siberian crane (Leucogeranus leucogeranus), also known as the Siberian white crane or the snow crane, is a bird of the family Gruidae, the cranes. They are distinctive among the cranes: adults are nearly all snowy white, except for their black primary feathers that are visible in flight, and with two breeding populations in the Arctic tundra of western and eastern Russia. The eastern populations migrate during winter to China, while the western population winters in Iran and (formerly) in Bharatpur, India.

Siberian crane
A captive individual in a zoo
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Gruidae
Genus: Leucogeranus
Bonaparte, 1855
Species:
L. leucogeranus
Binomial name
Leucogeranus leucogeranus
(Pallas, 1773)
Migration routes, breeding and wintering sites
Synonyms
  • Bugeranus leucogeranus
  • Sarcogeranus Ieucogeranus
  • Grus leucogeranus

Among the cranes, they make the longest distance migrations. Their populations, particularly those in the western range, have declined drastically in the 20th century due to hunting along their migration routes and habitat degradation. The world population was estimated in 2010 at about 3,200 birds, mostly belonging to the eastern population with about 95% of them wintering in the Poyang Lake basin in China, a habitat that may be altered by the Three Gorges Dam.[needs update]

Taxonomy and systematics edit

 
Mughal era painting of a Siberian crane by Ustad Mansur (c. 1625).

The Siberian crane was formally described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1773 and given the binomial name Grus leucogeranus.[3][4] The specific epithet is derived from the classical Greek words leukos for "white" and geranos for a "crane".[5] Ustad Mansur, a 17th-century court artist and singer of Jahangir, had illustrated a Siberian crane about 100 years earlier.[6] The genus Megalornis was used for the cranes by George Robert Gray and this species was included in it, while Richard Bowdler Sharpe suggested a separation from Grus and used the genus Sarcogeranus.[7][8][9] The Siberian crane lacks the complex tracheal coils found in most other cranes but shares this feature with the wattled crane. The unison call differed from that of most cranes and some authors suggested that the Siberian crane belonged in the genus Bugeranus along with the wattled crane. Comparisons of the DNA sequences of cytochrome-b however suggest that the Siberian crane is basal among the Gruinae and the wattled crane is retained as the sole species in the genus Bugeranus and placed as a sister to the Anthropoides cranes.[10][11]

A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2010 found that the genus Grus, as then defined, was polyphyletic.[12] In the resulting rearrangement to create monophyletic genera, the Siberian crane was moved to the resurrected genus Leucogeranus.[13] The genus Leucogeranus had been introduced by the French biologist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1855.[14]

Description edit

 
Juveniles at Oka Nature Reserve nursery

Adults of both sexes have a pure white plumage except for the black primaries, alula and primary coverts. The fore-crown, face and side of head is bare and brick red, the bill is dark and the legs are pinkish. The iris is yellowish. Juveniles are feathered on the face and the plumage is dingy brown. There are no elongated tertial feathers as in some other crane species.[15] During breeding season, both the male and female cranes are often seen with mud streaking their feathers. They dip their beaks in mud and smear it on their feathers. The call is very different from the trumpeting of most cranes and is a goose-like high pitched whistling toyoya. This is a fairly large species of crane. Siberian cranes typically weigh 4.9–8.6 kg (11–19 lb) and stand about 140 cm (4 ft 7 in) tall. The wingspan is reportedly from 210 to 260 cm (6 ft 11 in to 8 ft 6 in) and length is 115–127 cm (45–50 in). Males are on average larger than females.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21] The average weight of adults in one study was 6.81 kg (15.0 lb) while juvenile birds were slightly heavier on average at 7.1 kg (16 lb).[22] There is a single record of an outsized male of this species weighing 15 kg (33 lb). Usually, this crane is usually slightly smaller in weight and height than some other cranes, particularly the sarus crane, wattled crane and red-crowned crane.[23]

Distribution and habitat edit

The breeding area of the Siberian crane formerly extended between the Urals and Ob river south to the Ishim and Tobol rivers and east to the Kolyma region. The populations declined with changes in landuse, the draining of wetlands for agricultural expansion and hunting on their migration routes. The breeding areas in modern times are restricted to two widely disjunct regions. The western area in the river basins of the Ob, Konda and Sossva and to the east a much larger population in Yakutia between the Yana and the Alazeya rivers.[17] Like most cranes, the Siberian crane inhabits shallow marshlands and wetlands and will often forage in deeper water than other cranes. They show very high site fidelity for both their wintering and breeding areas, making use of the same sites year after year.[15] The western population winters in Iran and some individuals formerly wintered in India south to Nagpur and east to Bihar. The eastern populations winter mainly in the Poyang Lake area in China.[17]

Behaviour and ecology edit

Siberian cranes are widely dispersed in their breeding areas and are highly territorial. They maintain feeding territories in winter but may form small and loose flocks, and gather closer at their winter roosts. They are very diurnal, feeding almost all throughout the day. When feeding on submerged vegetation, they often immerse their heads entirely underwater. When calling, the birds stretch their neck forward.[17] The contexts of several calls have been identified and several of these vary with sex. Individual variation is very slight and most calls have a dominant frequency of about 1.4 kHz.[24] The unison calls, duets between paired males and female however are more distinctive with marked differences across pairs.[25] The female produces a higher pitched call which is the "loo" in the duetted "doodle-loo" call. Pairs will walk around other pairs to threaten them and drive them away from their territory.[17] In captivity, one individual was recorded to have lived for nearly 62 years[26] while another lived for 83 years.[27]

Feeding edit

These cranes feed mainly on plants although they are omnivorous. In the summer grounds they feed on a range of plants including the roots of hellebore (Veratrum misae), seeds of Empetrum nigrum as well as small rodents (lemmings and voles), earthworms and fish. They were earlier thought to be predominantly fish eating on the basis of the serrated edge to their bill, but later studies suggest that they take animal prey mainly when the vegetation is covered by snow. They also swallow pebbles and grit to aid in crushing food in their crop.[17] In their wintering grounds in China, they have been noted to feed to a large extent on the submerged leaves of Vallisneria spiralis.[28] Specimens wintering in India have been found to have mainly aquatic plants in their stomachs. They are however noted to pick up beetles and birds eggs in captivity.[29][30]

Breeding edit

Siberian cranes return to the Arctic tundra around the end of April and beginning of May.[31] The nest is usually on the edge of lake in boggy ground and is usually surrounded by water. Most eggs are laid in the first week of June when the tundra is snow free. The usual clutch is two eggs, which are incubated by the female after the second egg is laid. The male stands guard nearby. The eggs hatch in about 27 to 29 days. The young birds fledge in about 80 days. Usually only a single chick survives due to aggression between young birds. The population increase per year is less than 10%, the lowest recruitment rate among cranes. Their success in breeding may further be hampered by disturbance from reindeer and sometimes dogs that accompany reindeer herders.[17] Captive breeding was achieved by the International Crane Foundation at Baraboo after numerous failed attempts. Males often killed their mates and captive breeding was achieved by artificial insemination and the hatching of eggs by other crane species such as the Sandhill and using floodlights to simulate the longer daylengths of the Arctic summer.[32]

 
A Siberian Crane Family at Poyang Lake, Jiangxi, China

Migration edit

This species breeds in two disjunct regions in the arctic tundra of Russia; the western population along the Ob Yakutia and western Siberia. It is a long distance migrant and among the cranes, makes one of the longest migrations.[17] The eastern population winters on the Yangtze River and Lake Poyang in China, and the western population in Fereydoon Kenar in Iran. The central population, which once wintered in Keoladeo National Park, Bharatpur India, is extinct.

Status and conservation edit

 
Map Signatories to Siberian Crane memorandum (MoU)

The conservation status of the Siberian crane is very serious. In 2008, the decreasing world population was estimated to be around 3500–4000 individuals, nearly all of them belonging to the eastern breeding population.[1] Of the 15 crane species, this is the only regarded as critically endangered, the highest threatened category by the IUCN[1] (the whooping crane of North America has a smaller but rising population that is better protected, giving the species a status of endangered.[33]) The western population of the Siberian crane had dwindled to four in 2002 and subsequently it was thought to be extirpated, but a single individual, named "Omid", has wintered in Iran since 2006-2007.[1] The wintering site at Poyang in China holds an estimated 98% of the population and is threatened by hydrological changes caused by the Three Gorges Dam and other water development projects.

Historic records from India suggest a wider winter distribution in the past including records from Gujarat, near New Delhi and even as far east as Bihar.[18][34] In 1974 as many as 75 birds wintered in Bharatpur and this declined to a single pair in 1992 and the last bird was seen in 2002.[35] In the 19th century, larger numbers of birds were noted to visit India.[36] They were sought after by hunters and specimen collectors. An individual that escaped from a private menagerie was shot in the Outer Hebrides in 1891.[37] The western population may even have wintered as far west as Egypt along the Nile.[38]

Satellite telemetry was used to track the migration of a flock that wintered in Iran. They were noted to rest on the eastern end of the Volga delta.[39] Satellite telemetry was also used to track the migration of the eastern population in the mid-1990s, leading to the discovery of new resting areas along the species' flyway in eastern Russia and China.[40] The Siberian crane is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies and is subject of the Memorandum of Understanding concerning Conservation Measures for the Siberian Crane concluded under the Bonn Convention.

Significance in human culture edit

For Siberian natives – Yakuts and Yukaghirs - the white crane is a sacred bird associated with sun, spring and kind celestial spirits ajyy. In yakut epics Olonkho shamans and shamanesses transform into white cranes.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d BirdLife International (2018). "Leucogeranus leucogeranus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22692053A134180990. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22692053A134180990.en. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  3. ^ Peters, James Lee, ed. (1934). Check-list of Birds of the World. Vol. 2. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 153.
  4. ^ Pallas, Peter Simon (1773). Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des Russischen Reichs (in German). Vol. 2. St. Petersburg: Academie der Wissenschaften. p. 714.
  5. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. p. 224. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  6. ^ Divyabhanusinh (1987). "Record of two unique observations of the Indian cheetah in Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 84 (2): 269–274.
  7. ^ Bowdler Sharpe, R (1893). "[Meeting notes]". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 1 (7): 37.
  8. ^ Hartert, E (1922). Die Vogel der parlaarktischen Fauna. Band 3. Berlin: Verlag von R Friedlander and Sohn. pp. 1819–1820.
  9. ^ Bowdler Sharpe, R (1894). Catalogue of the Fulicariae and Alectorides in the collection of the British Museum. London: Taylor and Francis. pp. 261–262.
  10. ^ Krajewski, C; JW Fetzner Jr. (1994). "Phylogeny of cranes (Gruiformes: Gruidae) based on cytochrome-b DNA sequences" (PDF). The Auk. 111 (2): 351–365. doi:10.2307/4088599. JSTOR 4088599.
  11. ^ Wood, D S (1979). "Phenetic relationships within the family Gruidae" (PDF). Wilson Bulletin. 91 (3): 384–399.
  12. ^ Krajewski, C.; Sipiorski, J.T.; Anderson, F.E. (2010). "Mitochondrial genome sequences and the phylogeny of cranes (Gruiformes: Gruidae)". Auk. 127 (2): 440–452. doi:10.1525/auk.2009.09045. S2CID 85412892.
  13. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David, eds. (2019). "Flufftails, finfoots, rails, trumpeters, cranes, limpkin". World Bird List Version 9.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  14. ^ Bonaparte, Charles Lucien (1855). "Tableaux synoptiques de l'ordre des Hérons". Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de l'Académie des Sciences (in French). 40: 718–725 [720].
  15. ^ a b c Rasmussen, PC & Anderton, JC (2005). The Birds of South Asia. The Ripley Guide. Volume 2. Smithsonian Institution and Lynx Edicions. p. 138.
  16. ^ Ali, S. & Ripley, S. D. (1980). Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan. Volume 2. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. pp. 144–146.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h Johnsgard, P. (1983). Cranes of the World (PDF). Indiana University Press. pp. 129–139. ISBN 978-0-253-11255-2.
  18. ^ a b Baker, E. C. S. (1929). Fauna of British India. Birds. Volume 6 (2nd ed.). London: Taylor and Francis. p. 53.
  19. ^ Grus leucogeranus (2011).
  20. ^ Grue de Sibérie. oiseaux.net
  21. ^ Beaman, M., & Madge, S. (2010). The handbook of bird identification: for Europe and the western Palearctic. A&C Black.
  22. ^ Klenova, A. V., Goncharova, M. V., Kashentseva, T. A., & Naidenko, S. V. (2020). Voice breaking and its relation to body mass and testosterone level in the Siberian Crane (Leucogeranus leucogeranus). Journal of Ornithology, 161(3), 859-871.
  23. ^ Wood, Gerald (1983). The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats. Guinness Superlatives. ISBN 978-0-85112-235-9.
  24. ^ Bragina EV, Beme IR (2007). (PDF). Zoologičeskij žurnal (in Russian). 86 (12): 1468–1481. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-01.
  25. ^ Bragina, EV & Irina R. Beme (2010). "Siberian crane duet as an individual signature of a pair: comparison of visual and statistical classification techniques". Acta Ethologica. 13 (1): 39–48. doi:10.1007/s10211-010-0073-6. S2CID 36289511.
  26. ^ Davis, Malcolm (1969). "Siberian Crane longevity" (PDF). Auk. 86 (2): 347.
  27. ^ Temple, Stanley A. (1990). "How long do birds live The passenger pigeon" (PDF). Current Ornithology. 52 (3).
  28. ^ Guofeng Wu; de Leeuw Jan; Skidmore Andrew K.; Prins Herbert H. T.; Best Elly P. H.; Yaolin Liu (2009). "Will the Three Gorges Dam affect the underwater light climate of Vallisneria spiralis L. and food habitat of Siberian crane in Poyang Lake?" (PDF). Hydrobiologia. 623: 213–222. doi:10.1007/s10750-008-9659-7. S2CID 25193680.
  29. ^ Quinton W. H. St. (1921). "The White Asiatic crane". The Avicultural Magazine. 12 (3): 33–34.
  30. ^ Ellis, DH; Scott R. Swengel; George W. Archibald & Cameron B. Kepler (1998). (PDF). Behavioural Processes. 43 (2): 125–151. doi:10.1016/S0376-6357(98)00008-4. PMID 24896001. S2CID 21452196. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-22.
  31. ^ Bysykatova, IP; M. V. Vladimirtseva; N. N. Egorov & S. M. Sleptsov (2010). "Spring Migrations of the Siberian Crane (Grus leucogeranus) in Yakutia". Contemporary Problems of Ecology. 3 (1): 86–89. Bibcode:2010CPrEc...3...86B. doi:10.1134/S1995425510010145. S2CID 24230271.
  32. ^ Stewart JM (2009). "The 'lily of birds': the success story of the Siberian white crane". Oryx. 21: 6–21. doi:10.1017/S0030605300020421.
  33. ^ BirdLife International (2020). "Grus americana". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2020: e.T22692156A181242855. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2020-3.RLTS.T22692156A181242855.en. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
  34. ^ Blyth, Edward (1881). The natural history of the cranes. R. H. Porter. pp. 38–44.
  35. ^ Sharma, B.K.; Kulshreshtha, Seema; Sharma, Shailja (2013). "Historical, Sociocultural, and Mythological Aspects of Faunal Conservation in Rajasthan". In Sharma, B.K.; Kulshreshtha, Seema; Rahmani, Asad R. (eds.). Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: General Background and Ecology of Vertebrates. Springer. p. 201. ISBN 978-1461407997. Retrieved 27 August 2019. Siberian Crane Leucogeranus leucogeranus (Fig. 3.33) used to be the most charismatic and rare bird at Ghana or the Keoladeo National Park of Bharatpur. At one time, hundreds of "Sibes" used to winter in the Ghana Bird Sanctuary. Like white ghosts in the mist, they were lured by other north Indian wetlands from far and near. The "Sibes" used to visit Ghana from their breeding grounds in Siberia in search of food owing to the nonavailability of summer supplies due to extreme cold. No Siberian Crane was sighted in Bharatpur since 2003.
  36. ^ Finn, Frank (1906). How to know the Indian waders. Thacker, Spink and Co. pp. 82–83.
  37. ^ Clarke, WE (1892). "The reported occurrence of Grus leucogeranus Pallas, in the Outer Hebrides". The Annals of Scottish Natural History. 1 (1): 71–72.
  38. ^ Provencal, P. & Sørensen, U. G. (1998). "Medieval record of the Siberian White Crane Grus leucogeranus in Egypt". Ibis. 140 (2): 333–335. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1998.tb04399.x.
  39. ^ Kanai, Yutaka; Nagendran, Meenakshi; Ueta, Mutsuyuki; Markin, Yuri; Rinne, Juhani; Sorokin, Alexander G.; Higuchi, Hiroyoshi; Archibald, George W. (2002). "Discovery of breeding grounds of a Siberian Crane Grus leucogeranus flock that winters in Iran, via satellite telemetry". Bird Conservation International. 12 (4): 327–333. doi:10.1017/S0959270902002204.
  40. ^ Kanai, Y.; Mutsuyuki, U.; Germogenov, N.; Negandran, M.; Mita, N.; Higuchi, H. (2002). (PDF). Biological Conservation. 106 (3): 339–346. Bibcode:2002BCons.106..339K. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(01)00259-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-22.

External links edit

  • International Crane Foundation's Siberian crane page
  • BirdLife Species Factsheet
  • Siberian Crane Flyway Coordination (SCFC) enhances communication among the large network of scientists, governmental agencies, biologists, private organizations, and citizens involved with Siberian crane conservation in Eurasia.
  • Online broadcasting of white cranes’ lives from the Oksk hatchery arose

siberian, crane, leucogeranus, leucogeranus, also, known, siberian, white, crane, snow, crane, bird, family, gruidae, cranes, they, distinctive, among, cranes, adults, nearly, snowy, white, except, their, black, primary, feathers, that, visible, flight, with, . The Siberian crane Leucogeranus leucogeranus also known as the Siberian white crane or the snow crane is a bird of the family Gruidae the cranes They are distinctive among the cranes adults are nearly all snowy white except for their black primary feathers that are visible in flight and with two breeding populations in the Arctic tundra of western and eastern Russia The eastern populations migrate during winter to China while the western population winters in Iran and formerly in Bharatpur India Siberian crane A captive individual in a zoo Conservation status Critically Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix I CITES 2 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Gruiformes Family Gruidae Genus LeucogeranusBonaparte 1855 Species L leucogeranus Binomial name Leucogeranus leucogeranus Pallas 1773 Migration routes breeding and wintering sites Synonyms Bugeranus leucogeranus Sarcogeranus Ieucogeranus Grus leucogeranus Among the cranes they make the longest distance migrations Their populations particularly those in the western range have declined drastically in the 20th century due to hunting along their migration routes and habitat degradation The world population was estimated in 2010 at about 3 200 birds mostly belonging to the eastern population with about 95 of them wintering in the Poyang Lake basin in China a habitat that may be altered by the Three Gorges Dam needs update Contents 1 Taxonomy and systematics 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Feeding 4 2 Breeding 4 3 Migration 5 Status and conservation 6 Significance in human culture 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy and systematics edit nbsp Mughal era painting of a Siberian crane by Ustad Mansur c 1625 The Siberian crane was formally described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1773 and given the binomial name Grus leucogeranus 3 4 The specific epithet is derived from the classical Greek words leukos for white and geranos for a crane 5 Ustad Mansur a 17th century court artist and singer of Jahangir had illustrated a Siberian crane about 100 years earlier 6 The genus Megalornis was used for the cranes by George Robert Gray and this species was included in it while Richard Bowdler Sharpe suggested a separation from Grus and used the genus Sarcogeranus 7 8 9 The Siberian crane lacks the complex tracheal coils found in most other cranes but shares this feature with the wattled crane The unison call differed from that of most cranes and some authors suggested that the Siberian crane belonged in the genus Bugeranus along with the wattled crane Comparisons of the DNA sequences of cytochrome b however suggest that the Siberian crane is basal among the Gruinae and the wattled crane is retained as the sole species in the genus Bugeranus and placed as a sister to the Anthropoides cranes 10 11 A molecular phylogenetic study published in 2010 found that the genus Grus as then defined was polyphyletic 12 In the resulting rearrangement to create monophyletic genera the Siberian crane was moved to the resurrected genus Leucogeranus 13 The genus Leucogeranus had been introduced by the French biologist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1855 14 Description edit nbsp Juveniles at Oka Nature Reserve nursery Adults of both sexes have a pure white plumage except for the black primaries alula and primary coverts The fore crown face and side of head is bare and brick red the bill is dark and the legs are pinkish The iris is yellowish Juveniles are feathered on the face and the plumage is dingy brown There are no elongated tertial feathers as in some other crane species 15 During breeding season both the male and female cranes are often seen with mud streaking their feathers They dip their beaks in mud and smear it on their feathers The call is very different from the trumpeting of most cranes and is a goose like high pitched whistling toyoya This is a fairly large species of crane Siberian cranes typically weigh 4 9 8 6 kg 11 19 lb and stand about 140 cm 4 ft 7 in tall The wingspan is reportedly from 210 to 260 cm 6 ft 11 in to 8 ft 6 in and length is 115 127 cm 45 50 in Males are on average larger than females 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 The average weight of adults in one study was 6 81 kg 15 0 lb while juvenile birds were slightly heavier on average at 7 1 kg 16 lb 22 There is a single record of an outsized male of this species weighing 15 kg 33 lb Usually this crane is usually slightly smaller in weight and height than some other cranes particularly the sarus crane wattled crane and red crowned crane 23 Distribution and habitat editThe breeding area of the Siberian crane formerly extended between the Urals and Ob river south to the Ishim and Tobol rivers and east to the Kolyma region The populations declined with changes in landuse the draining of wetlands for agricultural expansion and hunting on their migration routes The breeding areas in modern times are restricted to two widely disjunct regions The western area in the river basins of the Ob Konda and Sossva and to the east a much larger population in Yakutia between the Yana and the Alazeya rivers 17 Like most cranes the Siberian crane inhabits shallow marshlands and wetlands and will often forage in deeper water than other cranes They show very high site fidelity for both their wintering and breeding areas making use of the same sites year after year 15 The western population winters in Iran and some individuals formerly wintered in India south to Nagpur and east to Bihar The eastern populations winter mainly in the Poyang Lake area in China 17 Behaviour and ecology editSiberian cranes are widely dispersed in their breeding areas and are highly territorial They maintain feeding territories in winter but may form small and loose flocks and gather closer at their winter roosts They are very diurnal feeding almost all throughout the day When feeding on submerged vegetation they often immerse their heads entirely underwater When calling the birds stretch their neck forward 17 The contexts of several calls have been identified and several of these vary with sex Individual variation is very slight and most calls have a dominant frequency of about 1 4 kHz 24 The unison calls duets between paired males and female however are more distinctive with marked differences across pairs 25 The female produces a higher pitched call which is the loo in the duetted doodle loo call Pairs will walk around other pairs to threaten them and drive them away from their territory 17 In captivity one individual was recorded to have lived for nearly 62 years 26 while another lived for 83 years 27 Feeding edit These cranes feed mainly on plants although they are omnivorous In the summer grounds they feed on a range of plants including the roots of hellebore Veratrum misae seeds of Empetrum nigrum as well as small rodents lemmings and voles earthworms and fish They were earlier thought to be predominantly fish eating on the basis of the serrated edge to their bill but later studies suggest that they take animal prey mainly when the vegetation is covered by snow They also swallow pebbles and grit to aid in crushing food in their crop 17 In their wintering grounds in China they have been noted to feed to a large extent on the submerged leaves of Vallisneria spiralis 28 Specimens wintering in India have been found to have mainly aquatic plants in their stomachs They are however noted to pick up beetles and birds eggs in captivity 29 30 Breeding edit Siberian cranes return to the Arctic tundra around the end of April and beginning of May 31 The nest is usually on the edge of lake in boggy ground and is usually surrounded by water Most eggs are laid in the first week of June when the tundra is snow free The usual clutch is two eggs which are incubated by the female after the second egg is laid The male stands guard nearby The eggs hatch in about 27 to 29 days The young birds fledge in about 80 days Usually only a single chick survives due to aggression between young birds The population increase per year is less than 10 the lowest recruitment rate among cranes Their success in breeding may further be hampered by disturbance from reindeer and sometimes dogs that accompany reindeer herders 17 Captive breeding was achieved by the International Crane Foundation at Baraboo after numerous failed attempts Males often killed their mates and captive breeding was achieved by artificial insemination and the hatching of eggs by other crane species such as the Sandhill and using floodlights to simulate the longer daylengths of the Arctic summer 32 nbsp A Siberian Crane Family at Poyang Lake Jiangxi China Migration edit This species breeds in two disjunct regions in the arctic tundra of Russia the western population along the Ob Yakutia and western Siberia It is a long distance migrant and among the cranes makes one of the longest migrations 17 The eastern population winters on the Yangtze River and Lake Poyang in China and the western population in Fereydoon Kenar in Iran The central population which once wintered in Keoladeo National Park Bharatpur India is extinct Status and conservation edit nbsp Map Signatories to Siberian Crane memorandum MoU The conservation status of the Siberian crane is very serious In 2008 the decreasing world population was estimated to be around 3500 4000 individuals nearly all of them belonging to the eastern breeding population 1 Of the 15 crane species this is the only regarded as critically endangered the highest threatened category by the IUCN 1 the whooping crane of North America has a smaller but rising population that is better protected giving the species a status of endangered 33 The western population of the Siberian crane had dwindled to four in 2002 and subsequently it was thought to be extirpated but a single individual named Omid has wintered in Iran since 2006 2007 1 The wintering site at Poyang in China holds an estimated 98 of the population and is threatened by hydrological changes caused by the Three Gorges Dam and other water development projects Historic records from India suggest a wider winter distribution in the past including records from Gujarat near New Delhi and even as far east as Bihar 18 34 In 1974 as many as 75 birds wintered in Bharatpur and this declined to a single pair in 1992 and the last bird was seen in 2002 35 In the 19th century larger numbers of birds were noted to visit India 36 They were sought after by hunters and specimen collectors An individual that escaped from a private menagerie was shot in the Outer Hebrides in 1891 37 The western population may even have wintered as far west as Egypt along the Nile 38 Satellite telemetry was used to track the migration of a flock that wintered in Iran They were noted to rest on the eastern end of the Volga delta 39 Satellite telemetry was also used to track the migration of the eastern population in the mid 1990s leading to the discovery of new resting areas along the species flyway in eastern Russia and China 40 The Siberian crane is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds AEWA applies and is subject of the Memorandum of Understanding concerning Conservation Measures for the Siberian Crane concluded under the Bonn Convention Significance in human culture editFor Siberian natives Yakuts and Yukaghirs the white crane is a sacred bird associated with sun spring and kind celestial spirits ajyy In yakut epics Olonkho shamans and shamanesses transform into white cranes References edit a b c d BirdLife International 2018 Leucogeranus leucogeranus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22692053A134180990 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22692053A134180990 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 Peters James Lee ed 1934 Check list of Birds of the World Vol 2 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 153 Pallas Peter Simon 1773 Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des Russischen Reichs in German Vol 2 St Petersburg Academie der Wissenschaften p 714 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm p 224 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Divyabhanusinh 1987 Record of two unique observations of the Indian cheetah in Tuzuk i Jahangiri Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 84 2 269 274 Bowdler Sharpe R 1893 Meeting notes Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 1 7 37 Hartert E 1922 Die Vogel der parlaarktischen Fauna Band 3 Berlin Verlag von R Friedlander and Sohn pp 1819 1820 Bowdler Sharpe R 1894 Catalogue of the Fulicariae and Alectorides in the collection of the British Museum London Taylor and Francis pp 261 262 Krajewski C JW Fetzner Jr 1994 Phylogeny of cranes Gruiformes Gruidae based on cytochrome b DNA sequences PDF The Auk 111 2 351 365 doi 10 2307 4088599 JSTOR 4088599 Wood D S 1979 Phenetic relationships within the family Gruidae PDF Wilson Bulletin 91 3 384 399 Krajewski C Sipiorski J T Anderson F E 2010 Mitochondrial genome sequences and the phylogeny of cranes Gruiformes Gruidae Auk 127 2 440 452 doi 10 1525 auk 2009 09045 S2CID 85412892 Gill Frank Donsker David eds 2019 Flufftails finfoots rails trumpeters cranes limpkin World Bird List Version 9 2 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 26 June 2019 Bonaparte Charles Lucien 1855 Tableaux synoptiques de l ordre des Herons Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Seances de l Academie des Sciences in French 40 718 725 720 a b c Rasmussen PC amp Anderton JC 2005 The Birds of South Asia The Ripley Guide Volume 2 Smithsonian Institution and Lynx Edicions p 138 Ali S amp Ripley S D 1980 Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan Volume 2 New Delhi Oxford University Press pp 144 146 a b c d e f g h Johnsgard P 1983 Cranes of the World PDF Indiana University Press pp 129 139 ISBN 978 0 253 11255 2 a b Baker E C S 1929 Fauna of British India Birds Volume 6 2nd ed London Taylor and Francis p 53 Grus leucogeranus 2011 Grue de Siberie oiseaux net Beaman M amp Madge S 2010 The handbook of bird identification for Europe and the western Palearctic A amp C Black Klenova A V Goncharova M V Kashentseva T A amp Naidenko S V 2020 Voice breaking and its relation to body mass and testosterone level in the Siberian Crane Leucogeranus leucogeranus Journal of Ornithology 161 3 859 871 Wood Gerald 1983 The Guinness Book of Animal Facts and Feats Guinness Superlatives ISBN 978 0 85112 235 9 Bragina EV Beme IR 2007 Sexual and individual differences in the vocal repertoire of adult Siberian Cranes Grus leucogeranus Gruidae PDF Zoologiceskij zurnal in Russian 86 12 1468 1481 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 09 01 Bragina EV amp Irina R Beme 2010 Siberian crane duet as an individual signature of a pair comparison of visual and statistical classification techniques Acta Ethologica 13 1 39 48 doi 10 1007 s10211 010 0073 6 S2CID 36289511 Davis Malcolm 1969 Siberian Crane longevity PDF Auk 86 2 347 Temple Stanley A 1990 How long do birds live The passenger pigeon PDF Current Ornithology 52 3 Guofeng Wu de Leeuw Jan Skidmore Andrew K Prins Herbert H T Best Elly P H Yaolin Liu 2009 Will the Three Gorges Dam affect the underwater light climate of Vallisneria spiralis L and food habitat of Siberian crane in Poyang Lake PDF Hydrobiologia 623 213 222 doi 10 1007 s10750 008 9659 7 S2CID 25193680 Quinton W H St 1921 The White Asiatic crane The Avicultural Magazine 12 3 33 34 Ellis DH Scott R Swengel George W Archibald amp Cameron B Kepler 1998 A sociogram for the cranes of the world PDF Behavioural Processes 43 2 125 151 doi 10 1016 S0376 6357 98 00008 4 PMID 24896001 S2CID 21452196 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 22 Bysykatova IP M V Vladimirtseva N N Egorov amp S M Sleptsov 2010 Spring Migrations of the Siberian Crane Grus leucogeranus in Yakutia Contemporary Problems of Ecology 3 1 86 89 Bibcode 2010CPrEc 3 86B doi 10 1134 S1995425510010145 S2CID 24230271 Stewart JM 2009 The lily of birds the success story of the Siberian white crane Oryx 21 6 21 doi 10 1017 S0030605300020421 BirdLife International 2020 Grus americana IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22692156A181242855 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22692156A181242855 en Retrieved 28 January 2023 Blyth Edward 1881 The natural history of the cranes R H Porter pp 38 44 Sharma B K Kulshreshtha Seema Sharma Shailja 2013 Historical Sociocultural and Mythological Aspects of Faunal Conservation in Rajasthan In Sharma B K Kulshreshtha Seema Rahmani Asad R eds Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan India General Background and Ecology of Vertebrates Springer p 201 ISBN 978 1461407997 Retrieved 27 August 2019 Siberian Crane Leucogeranus leucogeranus Fig 3 33 used to be the most charismatic and rare bird at Ghana or the Keoladeo National Park of Bharatpur At one time hundreds of Sibes used to winter in the Ghana Bird Sanctuary Like white ghosts in the mist they were lured by other north Indian wetlands from far and near The Sibes used to visit Ghana from their breeding grounds in Siberia in search of food owing to the nonavailability of summer supplies due to extreme cold No Siberian Crane was sighted in Bharatpur since 2003 Finn Frank 1906 How to know the Indian waders Thacker Spink and Co pp 82 83 Clarke WE 1892 The reported occurrence of Grus leucogeranus Pallas in the Outer Hebrides The Annals of Scottish Natural History 1 1 71 72 Provencal P amp Sorensen U G 1998 Medieval record of the Siberian White Crane Grus leucogeranus in Egypt Ibis 140 2 333 335 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1998 tb04399 x Kanai Yutaka Nagendran Meenakshi Ueta Mutsuyuki Markin Yuri Rinne Juhani Sorokin Alexander G Higuchi Hiroyoshi Archibald George W 2002 Discovery of breeding grounds of a Siberian Crane Grus leucogeranus flock that winters in Iran via satellite telemetry Bird Conservation International 12 4 327 333 doi 10 1017 S0959270902002204 Kanai Y Mutsuyuki U Germogenov N Negandran M Mita N Higuchi H 2002 Migration routes and important resting areas of Siberian cranes Crus leucogeranus between northeastern Siberian and China as revealed by satellite tracking PDF Biological Conservation 106 3 339 346 Bibcode 2002BCons 106 339K doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 01 00259 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 22 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siberian crane International Crane Foundation s Siberian crane page BirdLife Species Factsheet Siberian Crane Flyway Coordination SCFC enhances communication among the large network of scientists governmental agencies biologists private organizations and citizens involved with Siberian crane conservation in Eurasia Online broadcasting of white cranes lives from the Oksk hatchery arose Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siberian crane amp oldid 1217263132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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