With the alias of vermilion aigret, it
belongs to the Ciconiidae family of Ciconiiformes order. Its scientific name is
Nipponia nippon (Latin), or Japanese Crested Ibis (English).
It is about 79 centimeters in length and
about 1.8 kilograms in weight. The male and female birds have similar feather
color. Its body feathers are white, with slightly pink feather end. The occiput
has long cristae in the shape of willow leaves. The bared skin from forehead to
cheek is ponceau. Its primary remiges are deep pink at the base. Its
18-centimeter-long beak, slender with down-curved terminal, is black and tan
with red tip. Its vermeil legs are about 9 centimeters long.
The bird inhabits in open woodlands at an
elevation of 1,200 to 1,400 meters. It wades in nearby rivulets, morass and rice
fields, wandering to look for fingerlings, crabs, frogs, spiral shells and other
aquatic animals, as well as insects. It rests and sleeps on lofty trees. It is a
resident bird, gadding in small groups to low hills and plains in autumn and
winter. The bird starts to build nests in April to May, breeding one brood
annually with 2 to 4 eggs, which are nattier blue with thin brown spots. Both
the male and female birds take part in hatching. The squabs will break the shell
in about 30 days and leave the nest after 40 days' feeding.
The bird is rare and precious in the world,
mainly living at the south foot of Qinling Mountains in Yangxian County, Shaanxi
Province, In the past, it was widely distributed in the east of China, Japan
Russia, Korea and other places, but due to environmental deterioration and other
factors the population reduced sharply; till the 1970s it could not be seen in
the wild. Chinese bird experts rediscovered the bird population in Yangxian
County in May of 1981 after many years of survey, and it is the only existing
population of this genus in the world. Hereafter a lot of work on the protection
and scientific research of this bird has been done and with prominent results.
Especially in regard to feeding and breeding, the first artificial hatching is
successful in 1989, and since 1992, squabs have been able to survive
successfully. By 1995, the number of wild vermilion aigrets in China had reached
about 35, and the breeding numberwas 25, thus
bringing hope to save this precious bird.
Japanese Crested Ibis has been listed in Appendix I of International Trade Convention
on Endangered Wild Animal and Plant Species.