Red-crowned crane


The red-crowned crane, also called the Manchurian crane, is a large East Asian crane among the rarest cranes in the world. In some parts of its range, it is known as a symbol of luck, longevity, and fidelity.

Description

Adult red-crowned cranes are named for a patch of red bare skin on the crown, which becomes brighter during the mating season. Overall, they are snow white in color with black on the wing secondaries, which can appear almost like a black tail when the birds are standing, but the real tail feathers are actually white. Males are black on the cheeks, throat, and neck, while females are pearly gray in these spots. The bill is olive green to a greenish horn, the legs are slate to grayish black, and the iris is dark brown.
Juveniles are a combination of white, partly tawny, cinnamon brown, and rusty or grayish. The neck collar is grayish to coffee brown, the secondaries are dull black and brown, and the crown and forehead are covered with gray and tawny feathers. The primaries are white, tipped with black, as are the upper primary coverts. The legs and bill are similar to those of adults but lighter in color. This species is among the largest and heaviest cranes, typically measuring about tall and in length. Across the large wingspan, the red-crowned crane measures. Typical body weight can range from, with males being slightly larger and heavier than females and weight ranging higher just prior to migration. On average, it is the heaviest crane species, although both the sarus and wattled crane can grow taller and exceed this species in linear measurements.
On average, adult males from Hokkaidō weighed around and adult females there averaged around, while a Russian study found males averaged and females averaged ; in some cases, females could outweigh their mates despite the males' slightly larger average body weight. Another study found the average weight of the species to be. The maximum known weight of the red-crowned crane is. Among standard measurements, the wing chord measures, the exposed culmen measures, tail length is, and the tarsus measures.

Name

The scientific name of the Red-Crowned Crane is designated as "Japanese Crane ", yet its primary habitat lies in eastern Eurasia. This nomenclature was established by Swedish botanist and taxonomist Carl Linnaeus in Linnaean taxonomy. Due to the Qing Dynasty's policy of isolationism before the Opium Wars, European and American scholars were unable to enter China for research. At that time, Japanese researchers were able to provide red-crowned cranes. According to Latin nomenclature principles, newly discovered species must be named based on the "origin of the first live specimens." Therefore, the red-crowned crane was named "Grus Japonensis" - Japanese Crane.
Nowadays, Wild red-crowned cranes have become extinct on Japan's main island of Honshu, surviving only in Hokkaido. Consequently, there is partial consensus in English to adopt the common name Red-crowned Crane(红冠鹤), a direct translation of the Chinese name. However, the Latin Scientific Name remains unchanged, as biological names cannot be altered once established unless the species undergoes significant changes.

Range and habitat

In the spring and summer, the migratory populations of the red-crowned crane breed in Siberia, Northeast China and occasionally in north-eastern Mongolia. The breeding range centers in Lake Khanka, on the border of China and Russia. Later, in the fall, they migrate in flocks to the Korean Peninsula and east-central China to spend the winter. Vagrants have also been recorded in Taiwan. In addition to the migratory populations, a resident population is found in eastern Hokkaidō, Japan. This species nests in wetlands, marshes and rivers. In the wintering range, their habitat consists mainly of paddy fields, grassy tidal flats, and mudflats. In the flats, the birds feed on aquatic invertebrates, and, in cold, snowy conditions, the birds switch to mainly living on rice gleanings from the paddy fields.

Ecology and behaviour

Diet

Red-crowned cranes have a highly omnivorous diet, though the dietary preferences have not been fully studied. They eat rice, parsley, carrots, corn, redbuds, heath berries, acorns, buckwheat, grasses and a variety of water plants such as reeds. The animal matter in their diet consists of fish, including carp and goldfish, amphibians, especially salamanders, snails, crabs, dragonflies, other insects, small reptiles, shrimp, small birds and rodents. The daily food requirement of adult red-crowned cranes is.
They seem to prefer a carnivorous diet, although rice is now essential to survival for wintering birds in Japan and grass seeds are another important food source. While all cranes are omnivorous, per Johnsgard, the two most common crane species today are among the most herbivorous species while the two rarest species are perhaps the most carnivorous species. When feeding on plants, red-crowned cranes exhibit a preference for plants with a high content of crude protein and low content of crude fiber. In Hokkaido, fish such as Tribolodon, Pungitius, Sculpin and flatfish was major prey of adults, while chicks mostly feed on various insects. In Zhalong Nature Reserve, small fish less than, such as common carps, pond loach, and Chinese sleeper was mainly taken as well as aquatic invertebreas like pond snails, dragonflies, water beetles and large amount of plant matter. Elsewhere, mudflat crabs are locally important food source in Yellow River Delta.
They typically forage by keeping their heads close to the ground, jabbing their beaks into mud when they encounter something edible. When capturing fish or other slippery prey, they strike rapidly by extending their necks outward, a feeding style similar to that of the heron. Although animal prey can be swallowed whole, red-crowned cranes more often tear up large prey by grasping with their beaks and shaking it vigorously, eating pieces as they fall apart. Most foraging occurs in wet grasslands, cultivated fields, shallow rivers, or on the shores of lakes.

Migration

The red-crowned crane is currently found only in China, Russia, North Korea, South Korea, and Japan.
The population of red-crowned cranes in Japan is mostly non-migratory, with the race in Hokkaidō moving only to its wintering grounds.
Only the mainland population experiences a long-distance migration. They leave their wintering grounds in spring by February and are established on territories by April. In fall, they leave their breeding territories in October and November, with the migration fully over by mid-December.
China hosts its key breeding and wintering sites. Major breeding areas include the Sanjiang Plain and Wuyuer River basin in Heilongjiang, the Xianghai Reservoir and the lower Huolin River area in Jilin, the Liao River Delta in Liaoning, and the Hun River basin and Horqin wetlands in Inner Mongolia. Its wintering grounds are primarily located in the coastal mudflats and lakes of the middle and lower Yangtze River.
Cranes breeding in the Sanjiang Plain and the Xingkai Lake region migrate south along the Ussuri River, passing the Tumen River and the northern east coast of the Korean Peninsula, and winter in the Han River basin near Panmunjom. Those from the Zhalong and Xianghai regions migrate south in autumn via Panjin in Liaoning, follow the western coast of Bohai Bay, cross the Yellow River Delta, and mainly winter in the coastal wetlands of Yancheng, Jiangsu.

Sociality

Flock sizes are affected by the small numbers of the red-crowned crane, and given their largely carnivorous diet, some feeding dispersal is needed in natural conditions. Wintering cranes have been observed foraging, variously, in family groups, pairs, and singly, although all roosting is in larger groups with unrelated cranes. By the early spring, pairs begin to spend more time together, with nonbreeding birds and juveniles dispersing separately. Even while not nesting, red-crowned cranes tend to be aggressive towards conspecifics and maintain a minimum distance of to keep out of pecking range of other cranes while roosting nocturnally during winter. In circumstances where a crane violates these boundaries, it may be violently attacked.

Breeding

The red-crowned crane is monogamous and long-lived, with stable pair-bonding both within and between years, and believed to mate for life. The breeding maturity is thought to be reached at 3–4 years of age. All mating and egg-laying are largely restricted to April and early May. A red-crowned crane pair duets in various situations, helping to establish the formation and maintenance of the pair bond, as well as territorial advertisement and agonistic signaling. Both males and females may start a duet with the production of a start call, but the main part of the duet always began with a long male call. The pair moves rhythmically until they are standing close, throwing their heads back and letting out a fluting call in unison, often triggering other pairs to start duetting, as well. As it occurs year-round, the social implications of dancing are complex in meaning. However, dancing behavior is generally thought to show excitement in the species. Also, the performance of duet displays increased the probability of staying in a favorable area, supporting the hypothesis that duet displays function as a signal of joint resource defense in the flock.
Pairs are territorial during the breeding season. Nesting territories range from and are often the same year after year. Most nesting territories are characterized by flat terrain, access to wetland habitat, and tall grasses. Nest sites are selected by females, but built by both sexes and are frequently in a small clearing made by the cranes, either on wet ground or shallow water over waters no more than deep. Sometimes, nests are built on the frozen surface of water, as frigid temperatures may persist well into nesting season. Nest building takes about a week. A majority of nests contains two eggs, though one to three have been recorded.
Both sexes incubate the eggs for at least 30 days. They also both feed the young when they hatch. Staying in the nest for the first few weeks, the young start to follow their parents as they forage in marshes by around 3 months of age. New hatchlings weigh about and are covered in yellow natal down for two weeks. By early fall, about 95 days after hatching, the young are fledged and are assured fliers by migration time. Although they can fly well, crane young remain together with their parents for around 9 months. Young cranes maintain a higher-pitched voice that may serve to distinguish them from outwardly similar mature birds, this stage lasting until the leave parental care. The average adult lifespan is around 30 to 40 years, with some specimens living to 75 years of age in captivity. It is one of the longest-living species of bird.