Exciting news for those of us who, when young, thought this species would be extinct before we made adulthood.
As a bit of background, at the start of the 1980s there were just five known birds of this species, all in Japan. These five were captured in 1981 and placed in captivity in an attempt to breed them but they were all so old that they never did so. Then, in a miraculous reprieve, a tiny colony (just four adult birds) was found in the middle of China. Today there are about 500-odd birds.
And now they are back in Japan again.
Second-generation ?wild? crested ibis chick leaves nest - AJW by The Asahi Shimbun
As a bit of background, at the start of the 1980s there were just five known birds of this species, all in Japan. These five were captured in 1981 and placed in captivity in an attempt to breed them but they were all so old that they never did so. Then, in a miraculous reprieve, a tiny colony (just four adult birds) was found in the middle of China. Today there are about 500-odd birds.
And now they are back in Japan again.
Second-generation ?wild? crested ibis chick leaves nest - AJW by The Asahi Shimbun
7 June 2014
For the first time since the species went extinct in Japan, a crested ibis chick born in the wild to a parent also born in nature left its nest here, the Environment Ministry said.
The chick is a descendent of birds brought over from China in an attempt to revive the crested ibis population in Japan. The last wild crested ibis in Japan died in 2003.
The chick flew from its nest on a Japanese cedar branch about 20 meters aboveground early on June 6, briefly landed on a nearby branch, and then returned to its nest.
A staff member of the ministry captured video footage of the scene.
The chick’s mother was born in the wild and its father was born at the Sado Japanese Crested Ibis Conservation Center. The baby bird was born in the natural environment on Sado Island.
Two crested ibis couples include one partner that was born in the wild in Japan. The two pairs have a total of five chicks.
The Japanese government has designated the crested ibis species, known as “toki” in Japanese, a special natural treasure.
In 2008, the ministry began to release into the wild crested ibises that were born in captivity at the conservation center. The ibises were bred from parent birds that were borrowed or were gifts from the Chinese government.