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Crested ibis
Crested ibis
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Crested ibis
CITES Appendix I[2]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Pelecaniformes
Family: Threskiornithidae
Genus: Nipponia
Reichenbach, 1853
Species:
N. nippon
Binomial name
Nipponia nippon
(Temminck, 1835)
  former natural range
Synonyms[3]
  • Ibis nippon Temminck, 1835
  • Ibis temmincki Reichenbach, 1850
  • Nipponia temmincki (Reichenbach, 1850)
The crested ibis in captivity and in the wild on Sado Island, 2025

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon), also known as the Japanese crested ibis, or Asian crested ibis, is a species of ibis, native to eastern Asia. It is the only member of the genus Nipponia. In Japan, where it has special cultural significance, the name is toki (トキ).

Description

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In flight showing the pink underwing

It is a medium-sized to large ibis, 55–78.5 cm (21.7–30.9 in) long, with a bare red face, and a dense crest of plumes on the nape. The plumage varies with seasons; in winter, it is largely white with salmon-pink tones on the wings and tail; in summer, it is pale grey above and on the breast, with a darker grey shawl across its back, and white with a salmon-pink tinge below. In flight, the upper side of the wings and tail are white; the underside of the flight feathers on the wing and tail are strongly flushed pink. The bill is long and strongly downcurved, black with a red tip; the legs and feet are red. Juveniles have downy feathers on the cheeks, while the rest of the face is bare and orange-yellow. The plumage is tinged with smoky gray and has a rosy sheen. The legs are pale brown, and the iris is light yellowish-brown.[1][4][5][6]

Habitat

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The crested ibis inhabits temperate mountain forests and hilly regions, and is frequently active near rice paddies, riverbanks, ponds, marshes, and mountain streams. It typically nests in tall trees close to wetlands.[7]

Behavior

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The crested ibis is generally solitary and quiet, vocalizing mainly when taking flight and rarely during other activities. Individuals are most often observed alone, in pairs, or small groups, and seldom associate with other bird species. Its movements are slow and deliberate, and flight is characterized by steady, deliberate wingbeats with the head and neck extended forward and the legs stretched backward, not protruding beyond the tail. Crested ibises are diurnal, spending the day foraging in wetlands and roosting at night in tall trees.[8]

Breeding

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Breeding season is from March to May. Nests are built in mountain forests with minimal disturbance, positioned on the branches of tall chestnut, poplar, pine, and other trees near water bodies.[9] The nest is relatively crude and simple, primarily constructed from dead branches and lined with soft grass leaves, stems, and moss. Each clutch contains 2–5 eggs, typically 3. The eggs are oval-shaped, bluish-gray with brown spots. Incubation begins in April and is shared by both parents, lasting 28–30 days. The birds exhibit strong territoriality, defending their territory during the breeding season. After hatching, both parents feed the chicks, which gain the ability to fly and leave the nest for 45–50 days of feeding. When the chicks grow large enough to leave the nest, they remain near the nesting area with their parents for foraging and activities, typically leaving the nesting grounds after July. Sexual maturity occurs around 3 years of age, and in captivity, they can live over 17 years.[10]

Diet

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Crested ibises usually consists of small fish, loaches, frogs, crabs, shrimp, snails, crickets, earthworms, beetles, hemipteran insects, crustaceans, and other invertebrates and small vertebrates such as insect larvae.[11] Foraging occurs during daylight hours. It typically forages in shallow waters near water's edge or in rice paddies, though it is also observed foraging in muddy areas and on land. When foraging on land, it often moves slowly and quietly, scanning the ground ahead with its eyes.[12] Upon discovering food, it immediately pecks at it with its beak. When foraging in shallow water or mud, it primarily relies on repeatedly inserting its long, curved beak into the soil and water to probe for food.

Distribution

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The crested ibis was once widely distributed in China, spanning the Ussuri River basin and Lake Xingkai in Heilongjiang Province, northeastern China; eastern, central, and western Jilin Province; Dalian, Jin County, and Yingkou on the Liaodong Peninsula in Liaoning Province; Hebei Province; western Henan Province; Shandong Province; southeastern Shaanxi Province; Mount Taiabai and Yangxian County in southern Shaanxi Province; Lanzhou and southeastern Huixian in Gansu, Anhui, Qu County in Zhejiang, as well as Fuzhou and Hainan Island. They also nested in the Russian Far East, Japan, and was a non-breeding visitor to the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan.[13] However, it is now only found in Yangxian County, Shaanxi.[14]

Migration

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Populations originally breeding in eastern Russia, North Korea, northern Japan, and northern China typically migrate southward in autumn to overwinter in southern Japan and areas south of the Yellow River in China, extending to the lower Yangtze River, Fujian, Taiwan, and Hainan Island. Some individuals remain in North Korea for the winter. In contrast, populations breeding in southern China and Japan are generally non-migratory, serving as resident birds. The population currently distributed in Yangxian County, Shaanxi Province, China, also exhibits non-migratory behavior, wandering locally after the breeding season.[15]

Conservation

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The last wild crested ibis in Japan died in October 2003, with the remaining wild population found only in Shaanxi Province of China, until the reintroduction of captive bred birds back into Japan in 2008. They were previously thought to be extinct in China as well, until their rediscovery in 1981. Extensive captive breeding programs have been developed by Japan and China to conserve the species. They are on China's State Protection List. In 2002, there were a total of 130 colonies in China. Northwest Shaanxi province's research center has a history of 26 crested ibis fledglings including artificial and natural incubation. On July 31, 2002, five out of seven crested ibis chicks hatched at an incubation center in northwest Shaanxi province. This was the highest ever recorded number of chicks that hatched.[16] The parents of the chicks were chosen from 60 ibis pairs raised at that research center.[17]

Crested ibis near Crested Ibis Conservation Center on Sado Island

In the 1980s, the birds were decimated by overhunting, the use of pesticides, ongoing habitat loss, their already small population size, their limited range, winter starvation and persecution, which together brought the endangered species to the brink of extinction.[18] The crested ibis has been listed in Appendix I of the conservation treaty CITES.

The London Zoo had crested ibises from 1872 until 1873. Outside China, only Japan and South Korea currently keep the species.[citation needed]

Reintroductions

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Japan

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On September 25, 2008, in Sado, Niigata, the Sado Japanese Crested Ibis Preservation Center released 10 of the birds as part of its crested ibis restoration program, which aimed to introduce 60 ibises into the wild by 2015. It was the first time the bird has returned to the Japanese wild since 1981.[19]

On April 23, 2012, it was confirmed that three crested ibis chicks had hatched on Sado Island in Niigata Prefecture, the first time chicks had hatched in the wild in Japan in 36 years.[20][21]

On June 23, 2022, nearly five hundred toki returned to Sado, where the bird's delicate pink plumage and distinctive curved beak now draw tourists. They represent a rare conservation success story when one in eight bird species globally are threatened with extinction, and one which involved international diplomacy and an agricultural revolution on a small island off Japan's west coast.[22]

South Korea

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On the Korean Peninsula, the bird has not been present since it was last seen in 1979 near the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). South Korea made efforts to restore the species after former CCP general secretary Hu Jintao delivered a pair of the birds as a present during a South Korea–China summit in 2008, and CCP general secretary Xi Jinping presented another pair in 2013. The restoration center in Changnyeong has bred more than 360 crested ibises so far. The South Korean government has released dozens of crested ibises into the wild to promote its efforts to preserve biological diversity.[23]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Crested ibis (Nipponia nippon), also known as the Japanese or Asian crested ibis, is a medium-sized wading in the family , native to eastern and distinguished by its striking white plumage with a subtle pink tinge—most visible during flight—along with a prominent crest of elongated feathers on the nape of its . Measuring 55–78 cm in length, it has a long, slender, curved black bill tipped in red, bare red skin on the face and legs, a short fringed with a mane-like ruff, and a of 130–140 cm, with plumage turning grayish on the head and upper body during the breeding season. Once widespread across regions including , , Korea, and , the species faced severe declines due to habitat loss, , and pesticide use, leading to its presumed in the wild until a remnant population of just seven individuals was rediscovered in Yang County, Shaanxi Province, , in 1981. Through intensive conservation measures, including programs that have produced thousands of individuals for release and the establishment of protected reserves like the Shaanxi Crested Ibis National Nature Reserve, the total population (wild and captive) has rebounded to exceed 10,000 individuals as of 2025, with approximately 7,000 wild birds primarily in and smaller reintroduced wild populations in (~580 as of 2025), (small groups with first successful wild breeding in 2025), and other sites. Despite this recovery, the Crested ibis remains classified as Endangered on the due to ongoing threats such as degradation from agricultural intensification, agrochemical pollution, and low from historical bottlenecks, which continue to limit its range expansion beyond core areas in and neighboring provinces. Recent successes include artificial hatchings and wild breedings in 2025, underscoring ongoing conservation efforts. The bird inhabits a variety of and agricultural landscapes, breeding in tall trees near rivers, marshes, or paddies at elevations of 500–1,300 m from to , where it lays clutches of 3–4 eggs that hatch after about 28 days of incubation. Primarily non-migratory with high site fidelity, it forages in shallow waters and fields for a diet dominated by like , mollusks, and crustaceans (comprising 70–90% of intake), supplemented by small , amphibians, and earthworms, often in monogamous pairs that defend territories during the breeding season. These efforts highlight the as a symbol of successful avian conservation in , though sustained protection and monitoring are essential to prevent future declines.

Taxonomy and nomenclature

Scientific classification

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) belongs to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Chordata, class Aves, order Pelecaniformes, family Threskiornithidae, genus Nipponia, and species N. nippon.https://datazone.birdlife.org/species/factsheet/asian-crested-ibis-nipponia-nippon The genus Nipponia is monotypic, containing only this species, and was established by Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach in 1853 to accommodate the unique morphological and distributional traits of the crested ibis.https://www.gbif.org/species/2480809 The itself was first described by Coenraad Jacob Temminck in 1835 under the Ibis nippon, based on specimens from .https://www.gbif.org/species/2480810 Within the family , the crested ibis forms a distinct lineage from other ibises, such as the (Threskiornis melanocephalus), as evidenced by molecular phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA that highlight genus-level divergences driven by geographic isolation and adaptive specialization.https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-014-0557-1 No are recognized, with genetic studies confirming low intraspecific variation across remaining populations, consistent with a single, historically widespread .https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/bird-conservation-international/article/low-genetic-diversity-in-the-endangered-crested-ibis-nipponia-nippon-and-implications-for-conservation/20B2938CBF582289224E19364975E04F

Etymology

The scientific name of the crested ibis is Nipponia nippon, with the Nipponia established by Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach in 1853 and derived from "Nippon," the Japanese word for , underscoring the bird's strong historical ties to the region. The species epithet "nippon" redundantly emphasizes this Japanese origin, a convention sometimes used in to highlight geographic or cultural significance. Originally described in Western science by Coenraad Jacob Temminck in 1835 as Ibis nippon, the was later reclassified into the monotypic Nipponia to better reflect its distinct morphological traits among . The common English name "crested ibis" directly alludes to the species' prominent bushy black crest of elongated feathers on the back of the head, a key identifying feature visible year-round. Variants such as "Japanese crested ibis" or "Asian crested ibis" highlight its native range across eastern , with the "Japanese" qualifier stemming from its former abundance in Japan and cultural prominence there. In Japanese, the bird is known as toki (トキ), an ancient name possibly onomatopoeic or descriptive of its calls, often rendered in kanji as 朱鷺 (vermilion ) or 桃花鳥 (peach blossom ), the latter evoking the delicate pinkish tones of its during breeding season. The Chinese name is zhū huán (朱鹮), translating to "vermilion " or "red ibis," referring to the reddish facial skin and tinges that intensify in the breeding phase.

Physical description

Morphology and plumage

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) is a medium-sized wading featuring predominantly white , a long decurved bill, elongated vermilion legs, and a distinctive bushy crest of white feathers on the that can be raised or fanned. The bare facial skin is red year-round in adults, while the legs remain reddish and the bill is black with a red tip. The is glossy white overall, often with a rosy tinge in non-breeding adults, and display reddish-orange hues at the rachis, creating a salmon-pink appearance on the underwing during flight. During the breeding season, adults develop a characteristic nuptial coloration where the head, , and back turn charcoal gray through the cosmetic application of a black lipophilic substance secreted from a patch of on the and . Juveniles possess duller white feathers and a shorter crest compared to adults. Sexual dimorphism is minimal, with males slightly larger than females but otherwise similar in plumage and features, rendering them difficult to distinguish in the field. The long, sensitive decurved bill is structurally adapted for tactile probing in and soft substrates to locate prey. The prominent crest represents a key structural feature, potentially aiding in visual signaling or blending with reed habitats.

Size and measurements

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) is a medium-sized wading bird, with a body length of 70–80 cm (28–31 in) from bill tip to tail tip. Its measures 120–140 cm (47–55 in), enabling effective flight over wetlands and agricultural fields. These dimensions place it among the smaller to medium ibises, facilitating agile in shallow waters. The species exhibits in mass, with adults weighing 1.5–1.8 kg (3.3–4.0 lb) overall. Males average 1,776 g, while females average 1,545 g, reflecting differences in body size and energy demands during . The downward-curved bill is 16–18 cm long, specialized for probing soft substrates, and the legs measure approximately 9 cm in tarsus length, supporting wading in depths up to 15 cm. Juveniles are 10–15% smaller than adults in linear measurements and mass at fledging, allowing for gradual development of skills. Adults show seasonal weight fluctuations of up to 20% during breeding, with increases linked to heightened energy expenditure for and nest-building.
MeasurementMalesFemalesOverall Range
Weight (g)1,776 (average)1,545 (average)1,500–1,800
Bill length (cm)--16–18
Leg length (cm)--~9

Habitat and distribution

Preferred habitats

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) primarily inhabits shallow wetlands, paddies, riverbanks, marshes, and flooded grasslands, favoring a mosaic of open water areas for and adjacent woodlands for nesting and roosting. These environments provide the soft, moist substrates essential for probing and capturing prey, while the combination of aquatic and terrestrial features supports the species' life cycle requirements. For nesting, the crested ibis selects tall trees such as oaks, larches, pines, elms, aspens, and poplars, typically 5-15 meters in height with large diameters at breast height, situated in wetland-adjacent forests or woodland edges. Nests are built high above ground, often close to trunks in more rugged areas for stability, and the species prefers "satoyama" landscapes in regions like , which integrate paddy fields with secondary forests to offer both access and secure roosting sites. In these microhabitats, proximity to low-disturbance agricultural areas enhances food availability, with pH-neutral, fertile soils rich in supporting prey abundance. Foraging occurs in muddy or shallow waters, generally 5-20 cm deep, with soft substrates like or in paddies and streams that facilitate tactile probing for and small . The species avoids deep water bodies or arid zones, relying instead on areas with minimal vegetation cover to expose prey. Seasonally, crested ibises favor forested wetlands during breeding for nesting security and nestling food demands, shifting to open agricultural fields and flooded grasslands post-breeding to exploit dispersed resources in larger flocks. As populations expand, they increasingly utilize plains with human-modified habitats, provided disturbance remains low and wetland-agriculture interfaces are maintained.

Historical and current range

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) was historically widespread across eastern Asia, ranging from the Ussuri River basin in southeastern and the River basin in central and eastern , through the Korean Peninsula, to including and islands, where it inhabited various wetlands until the late . Populations were once abundant in temperate forests and riverine areas, with records indicating breeding in the and wintering across broader Japanese regions. By the early 20th century, the species underwent severe range contraction due to habitat loss and hunting, leading to local extirpations: the last individuals disappeared from Russia around 1963, North Korea declared the bird locally extinct in 1975, and the final wild birds in Japan were captured in 1981 with the population fully extinct in the wild by 2003. The species was presumed globally extinct until a small population of seven individuals was rediscovered in 1981 in the Qinling Mountains of Shaanxi Province, China, marking the sole remaining wild stronghold at that time. Today, the crested ibis's wild range is primarily confined to , centered in and provinces, where it occupies an estimated extent of occurrence of about 2,300 km², with ongoing expansions from montane forests in the Mountains to adjacent lowland plains. Reintroduced populations have been established outside , including on and the in since 2008, in Changnyeong County (near Cheonsu Bay) in starting in 2017. The global wild population has grown to over 10,000 individuals as of 2025, with the vast majority in (approximately 6,000 in alone), while reintroduced groups include approximately 580 wild birds in as of 2025 and a small wild population in , where the first natural breeding was recorded in 2025. Recent monitoring has documented significant range expansions, including colonization of plain areas beyond the traditional mountain habitats, where over two-thirds of breeding pairs now nest, reflecting increased tolerance to human-modified landscapes. In 2024–2025, satellite-tracked individuals in eastern achieved record migrations, such as a 260 km journey across the in a single day at speeds of 30–50 km/h, indicating potential for further dispersal to coastal and international sites.

Behavior and ecology

Diet and foraging

The Crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) is primarily a tactile forager that relies on a diet dominated by aquatic and semi-aquatic prey. Small , including , snails, crustaceans, and earthworms, form the bulk of its food intake, accounting for 70–90% of prey captured by frequency across seasons. Small fish such as (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus), amphibians like frogs and newts, and occasional mollusks supplement this, with loaches comprising less than 20% of captures but providing significant biomass, particularly in winter. matter, including grains, seeds, and roots from paddies, makes up a smaller portion, often incidentally consumed while probing agricultural fields. Prey items are typically small, ranging from 1–5 cm in length, allowing the bird to avoid larger, more difficult targets. Foraging occurs mainly in shallow wetlands, paddies, ditches, and grasslands, where the ibis employs a probing technique with its long, curved bill to extract buried or hidden prey from soft and soil. The bill tip is equipped with specialized mechanoreceptors, such as Herbst corpuscles, concentrated in sensory pits that detect vibrations and pressure changes, enabling "remote touch" detection of prey without visual cues. This is particularly effective for locating in opaque substrates. During the non-breeding season, individuals often in small flocks of up to several dozen, enhancing efficiency through shared disturbance of prey, while breeding pairs or solitary birds more independently to defend territories. Daily foraging patterns are diurnal, typically spanning 4–6 hours concentrated in the morning and evening, though extending longer in winter to meet energetic demands. Captive individuals consume 300–500 g of food per day, suggesting similar wild intake to support their body mass of around 500–700 g. Seasonally, the diet shifts toward more aquatic prey like loaches in winter ditches and paddies, with increased terrestrial invertebrates such as earthworms in late summer grasslands; plant consumption rises opportunistically in post-harvest fields. Recent observations indicate higher foraging success in lowland plain habitats compared to mountainous areas, due to abundant paddy resources and reduced terrain barriers.

Breeding and reproduction

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) is primarily monogamous, with pairs often forming lifelong bonds and remaining together year-round, though some variation including has been observed in reintroduced populations. behaviors typically begin in , involving displays such as head bobbing while carrying nesting material, pseudo-copulatory posturing, touching, mutual (allopreening), and raising of the crest feathers to signal readiness for mating. These displays help reinforce pair bonds, and pairs may perform aerial chases together; in some cases, environmental stress or rearing methods in captivity can reduce the frequency of such behaviors in reintroduced birds. The breeding season generally spans February to August in core ranges, with peak activity from March to July; egg-laying occurs from early March to early May, influenced by and quality in the northern parts of the distribution. Birds typically reach and first breed at 3–4 years of age. Nesting occurs in loose colonies or solitary pairs, with platforms constructed from sticks and lined with grass, moss, leaves, or feathers; these are often built or reused in tall trees such as Chinese red (Pinus tabuliformis) or Chinese cork (Quercus variabilis), at heights of 10–15 meters above ground. Males contribute more to nest building, while both sexes defend territories aggressively during this period. Clutch sizes average 3 (range 1–5), laid at intervals of 1–2 days, with each being blue-gray and speckled with spots; sizes are smaller in degraded habitats due to resource limitations. Incubation begins with the first or second and lasts 26–30 days (averaging 28.5 days), shared equally by both parents, who take turns during the day and night. Eggs hatch asynchronously, typically in mid-May, producing altricial chicks covered in sparse light gray down with bare heads and bright orange-red legs. Chicks are brooded continuously for the first 10–15 days, with both parents providing regurgitated food and protection; continues post-hatching, including shading from sun and rain. Young at 38–45 days (averaging 40 days), though they remain dependent on parents for feeding and remain near the nest until early ; fledging success in wild populations ranges from 60–80%, with higher rates in protected reintroduction sites. During breeding, the birds' facial skin may change to a brighter red, enhancing visual signaling in and territory defense.

Migration and movements

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) is classified as a non-migratory that remains largely resident within its local habitats year-round, though it undertakes short-distance post-breeding dispersals rather than true seasonal migrations. These movements typically involve flocks shifting from montane breeding grounds to lowland plains for overwintering, covering distances of 15–45 km between July and October in central Chinese populations. Altitudinal shifts also occur, with birds wintering below 700 m and ascending to around 1,200 m during the breeding season from to . Dispersal patterns differ by age and sex, with juveniles showing greater mobility than adults, who maintain year-round territoriality. In the Mountains of , post-fledging dispersal distances averaged 20.3 ± 7.0 km, while natal dispersal distances showed females dispersing farther (mean 9.6 km) than males (5.9 km), often in a southeasterly direction. Post-fledging juveniles gradually expand their range, beginning independence about 26 days after fledging and dispersing up to several kilometers from natal sites within 60 days, while philopatric individuals remain closer to the nest. For reintroduced birds in , mean dispersal distances ranged from 6.67 km to 14.76 km post-release, influenced by timing and sex but not significantly by age. Home range dynamics reflect these movements, with monthly estimates (95% utilization distribution) varying from 7.76 to 15.45 km² based on a decade-long GPS study of 31 individuals in (2014–2024), showing an annual decline of about 8.46 km² possibly due to habitat familiarity. Daily flight distances averaged 2.95–3.08 km during active periods, with higher mobility observed in open plains s during the post-breeding "wandering" phase, where birds select and roosting sites based on resource distribution. These patterns are primarily driven by availability and habitat quality, as GPS data indicate reduced distances in years with altered environmental conditions, such as 2019 (β = −1890 ± 772 m). Roosting is communal and occurs nocturnally in tall trees near wetlands or agricultural areas, with high site fidelity (mean 0.261) and use of 13.83–26.37 roost sites per activity period across tracked flocks. Flock sizes during these gatherings typically range from pairs to groups of several dozen, facilitating social foraging and anti-predator vigilance, though specific sizes vary by season and location.

Conservation

Historical decline and extinction

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) was historically widespread across , including regions of , , Korea, and , but began experiencing population declines in the primarily due to conversion for and of nesting woodlands. As wetlands essential for were drained and transformed into rice paddies, and pine forests used for breeding were cleared for farmland, the species' suitable habitats diminished significantly, setting the stage for more severe losses in the following century. These anthropogenic pressures, combined with early hunting practices, reduced the ibis's range and numbers, though it remained relatively common in remote areas until the late 1800s. The 20th century accelerated the decline dramatically, with over-hunting for feathers, meat, and traditional medicines decimating populations across its range; in , intensified hunting following the in 1868, aided by modern firearms, led to near-local extinction by the early 1900s, despite legal protection enacted in 1937 that proved too late to halt the loss. In and Korea, widespread drainage for agricultural expansion further fragmented habitats, reducing the global population to fewer than 100 individuals by the . The introduction of pesticides in rice fields during the –1970s exacerbated the crisis by contaminating waterways and diminishing prey species such as and frogs, leading to starvation and reproductive failure; by the 1970s, the ibis had vanished from the wild in and Korea, with the last confirmed sighting outside occurring in the in 1979. By 1980, following extensive but unsuccessful searches, the crested ibis was widely declared across most of its former range, with only a tiny remnant population persisting as the final stronghold in China's Province. This near-extinction served as a poignant symbol in regional and conservation narratives, embodying themes of purity, renewal, and human-induced loss, which heightened early awareness of threats and spurred protective measures in and .

Rediscovery and captive breeding

In May 1981, a small population of seven crested ibises—consisting of two breeding pairs and three nestlings—was rediscovered in a remote mountainous area of Yangxian County, Shaanxi Province, central China, marking the species' survival after it was presumed extinct in the region. This finding prompted immediate protective measures, including the establishment of a nature reserve, which helped the wild population grow to around 140 individuals by 2002 through habitat safeguarding and reduced human disturbance. Captive breeding efforts began that same year in , with the initial seven birds forming the foundation of the program at facilities like the Rare Wild Animal Breeding and Research Center. The initiated artificial incubation in 1989, achieving the world's first successful hatching of a crested ibis chick under controlled conditions, though early survival rates were low. Techniques such as hand-rearing, egg removal for artificial incubation at 37.7–38.0°C with 55–60% , and combined parental-artificial brooding were refined, leading to hatchability rates approaching 99% by the late 1990s. International cooperation enhanced genetic diversity and program success; in 1999, China transferred five pairs to Japan for captive breeding on Sado Island, and similar exchanges occurred with South Korea starting in 2018 to support reintroduction efforts there. Genetic management strategies, including pedigree tracking and selective pairing, preserved approximately 88–90% of the founding population's diversity, mitigating inbreeding risks in the captive stock derived from the original seven birds. By 2000, the Beijing Zoo and associated centers had bred over 200 birds in total, with around 130 in captivity. The captive population expanded rapidly, reaching more than 1,000 individuals across five Chinese facilities by 2010, providing a surplus for reintroduction. Over 600 captive-bred crested ibises had been released into the wild in by 2025, contributing to broader recovery while initial phases focused on building viable stock.

Current status and threats

The crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) remains classified as Endangered on the , a status it has held since due to its restricted range and ongoing habitat pressures despite population recovery efforts. In , the species is categorized as Critically Endangered following its reclassification from Extinct in the Wild in 2024, reflecting small but growing wild populations from reintroductions. As of 2025, the global wild population is estimated at over 10,000 individuals, with the majority concentrated in , primarily in Province. Ongoing threats to the crested ibis include habitat loss from , agricultural intensification, and infrastructure development such as construction, which fragments and paddies essential for . , particularly from pesticides and agrochemicals, reduces prey availability in aquatic habitats, while exacerbates wetland drying and alters cultivation patterns critical to the ' diet. disturbances, including and farming activities, increase stress and nest failure rates, and reintroduction programs face risks from low and potential disease exposure in novel environments. Recent efforts include the release of 12 birds in in May 2025 and the transfer of 16 from in October 2024 to bolster . Population monitoring in involves annual censuses using line transects and ground surveys to track breeding pairs and fledglings, providing data for . Satellite and GPS tracking of reintroduced individuals reveals annual survival rates of approximately 75% for released birds, with higher rates (around 90%) for wild-hatched juveniles, indicating improving post-release adaptation. Despite these challenges, positive trends include a rate of about 8-12% annually, effectively doubling every 5-7 years since the 1980s, driven by habitat restoration and reduced . Expansion into new areas, such as plains beyond core mountain wetlands, has broadened the ' range and lowered risk to near zero over the next five generations. Legal protections under Appendix I prohibit international trade, while in , dedicated reserves like the Shaanxi Hanzhong Crested Ibis National Nature Reserve enforce habitat safeguards and anti-poaching measures.

Reintroduction programs

In China

The reintroduction program for the crested ibis in commenced in 2007 with the initial release of 26 captive-bred individuals in Ningshan County, Province, marking the world's first successful reintroduction of the into the wild. By 2025, hundreds of birds had been released across multiple sites in , , and provinces to bolster population growth and range expansion. These efforts have contributed to a self-sustaining wild population in , increasing from 7 individuals discovered in 1981 to over 10,000 by 2025, as part of a global total exceeding 11,000. Reintroduction methods emphasize soft releases, in which birds are held in acclimation enclosures equipped with feeding stations to enhance post-release and skills. Supporting restoration has rehabilitated over 1,000 hectares of degraded wetlands, creating essential and nesting environments through efforts like and water management. Collaborative research with institutions such as Normal University has informed these strategies through ongoing monitoring of dispersal, , and genetics. Key milestones include the first wild nesting by reintroduced birds in 2008, when a pair formed and bred successfully shortly after release, signaling early program viability. In 2025, a reintroduced individual achieved a migration distance of 260 km along China's eastern coast and Bohai Sea, demonstrating restored mobility. International cooperation has involved egg and bird exchanges with Japan and South Korea to improve genetic diversity, including the return of 16 Japan-born individuals to China in 2024. Despite successes, challenges persist, including poaching incidents that account for about 5% of mortality in monitored populations, as evidenced by a 2018 case in where perpetrators received lengthy sentences for killing a . The species' expansion into lowland plains habitats highlights its adaptability, with showing increased tolerance to human-modified landscapes beyond traditional mountainous areas.

In Japan

The reintroduction of the crested ibis (Nipponia nippon), known locally as "toki," to began after its extirpation from the wild in 2003, with the program centered on restoring the species to its historical range on . In 1999, two birds were imported from to initiate at the Sado Japanese Crested Ibis Conservation Center, marking the start of genetic supplementation with Chinese stock to bolster the local lineage. By 2008, the captive population had grown sufficiently to commence releases, with the first 10 individuals set free on September 25 in the Kosado area of . Subsequent releases continued annually, totaling over 490 birds by 2022 and exceeding 500 cumulatively by 2025 to support population establishment. Sado Island serves as the primary reintroduction site, leveraging its expansive rice paddies and isolated geography to minimize human disturbance, while the in was selected for expansion due to its suitable wetlands and historical ibis presence. In February 2025, Japan's Ministry of the Environment announced plans to release up to 20 crested ibises on the starting in early 2026, aiming to aid recovery following the devastating 2024 earthquake by promoting in restored agricultural areas. These efforts build on Sado's success, where habitat restoration has focused on "ibis-friendly" farming practices, including reduced pesticide use, winter flooding of paddies to enhance prey availability, and the creation of biotopes through natural river and forest regeneration. The program's outcomes have been promising, with the wild population on exceeding 500 individuals by early 2025, reflecting successful adaptation and reproduction. The first natural breeding event occurred in 2012, when a wild pair hatched three chicks on April 23, signaling the onset of self-reproduction outside captivity. Public education initiatives have elevated the toki as a cultural symbol of environmental harmony, fostering community involvement through "Team Ibis" monitoring groups and that supports local conservation. The long-term goal is to achieve a fully self-sustaining population across sites by 2030, supported by ongoing from Chinese imports to mitigate risks.

In South Korea

The reintroduction program for the crested ibis (Nipponia nippon) in began in 2008, when a was donated by and arrived at the Upo Crested Ibis Restoration Center in Changnyeong-gun, Gyeongsangnam-do Province. This initiative aimed to restore the species, which had been on the Korean Peninsula since 1978. The center focused on to build a founder population, importing additional birds from over the years to support and increase numbers. Releases into the wild commenced in 2019 at the adjacent Upo , a historically suitable that underwent restoration efforts to enhance foraging areas and nesting sites through rehabilitation and reduced use in surrounding paddies. Initial soft releases involved placing birds in semi-wild enclosures for acclimation before full freedom, with annual releases scaling up to approximately 40 individuals by the mid-2020s; by 2024, over 100 birds had been released cumulatively, though the free-ranging wild population remained small at around 20-30 individuals due to gradual establishment. Monitoring employs GPS transmitters and radio-tags on released birds to track movements, home ranges, and local adaptation, revealing preferences for edges and fields within a 10-15 km radius of the release site. Progress includes the first successful wild nesting in 2021, when a pair released in 2019 hatched two chicks at Upo Wetland, marking the species' reproduction in Korea after over four decades. Subsequent breeding events followed, with three more chicks hatching in the wild in 2025 near Daedae-ri, indicating improving establishment. Survival rates for released juveniles have averaged around 60-70% in the first year, supported by supplemental feeding during harsh winters. International collaboration under a 2019 trilateral (MOU) among , , and facilitates expertise sharing, bird exchanges, and joint monitoring, with further discussions in 2024 reinforcing these efforts. Challenges persist, including cold winters that strain resources, predation by , and occasional human disturbances in agricultural areas. The program targets a self-sustaining wild population of at least 100 individuals by 2030 through continued releases and enhancements.

References

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