Fengshan LI, Jiandong WU, James HARRIS, James BURNHAM. 2012: Number and distribution of cranes wintering at Poyang Lake, China during 2011-2012. Avian Research, 3(3): 180-190. DOI: 10.5122/cbirds.2012.0027
Citation: Fengshan LI, Jiandong WU, James HARRIS, James BURNHAM. 2012: Number and distribution of cranes wintering at Poyang Lake, China during 2011-2012. Avian Research, 3(3): 180-190. DOI: 10.5122/cbirds.2012.0027

Number and distribution of cranes wintering at Poyang Lake, China during 2011-2012

More Information
  • Corresponding author:

    Fengshan Li, E-mail: fengshan@savingcranes.org

  • Received Date: 19 May 2012
  • Accepted Date: 14 Jul 2012
  • Available Online: 23 Apr 2023
  • Poyang Lake is a very important wintering place for cranes in China and East Asia. Two crane surveys were conducted at Poyang Lake during the 2011/2012 winter, the first on 18-19 December 2011 and the second on 18-19 February 2012. The survey covered the entire Poyang Lake basin, as well as two main lakes in Jiujiang (Saicheng Hu and Chi Hu), i.e., a total of 85 sub-lakes were surveyed. Both surveys recorded four species of cranes. The first survey on 18-19 December 2011 recorded 4577 Siberian Cranes (Grus leucogeranus), mostly in Bang Hu, Sha Hu and Dahu Chi, 302 Hooded Cranes (G. monacha), 885 White-naped Cranes (G. vipio) and 8408 Eurasian Cranes (G. grus), for the most part in the center of the lake basin. The second survey on 18-19 February 2012 recorded 3335 Siberian Cranes (mostly in Poyang Lake National Nature Reserve (PLNR) and its surrounding areas), 110 Hooded Cranes (largely in PLNR and its surrounding areas), 283 White-naped Cranes (86% in Bang Hu) and 2205 Eurasian Cranes (particularly in Duchang and Nanjishan NNR). The number of Siberian Cranes enumerated in December was 1000 more than the second count in February 2012. It is not possible to rule out double counting due to the close proximity of the main sites of the Siberian Cranes. During winters from 1998 to 2009, the average of the highest counts each winter was 3091, ranging from 2345 in 1996 to 4004 in 2002. By comparison with counts taken at other times, we therefore estimate a wintering population of Siberian Cranes of~3800-4000 at Poyang Lake. Additional evidence will be needed to raise the world population estimate. Our more recent surveys indicate a continuing decline in the number of White-naped Cranes and an increase in Eurasian Cranes.

  • An adult Asian Open-billed Stork (Anastomus oscitans) was observed in the Longjing reservoir of Baise City, northwestern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region on 3 October 2010. It is the first record of this big stork in Guangxi, southwestern China. The Longjing reservoir is located in the Youjiang district of Baise, with a total area of about 200 ha. This reservoir, surrounded by Masson pines (Pinus massoniana), is also a fishpond for local people. The reservoir was draining water to net fishes when we detected this stork. The stork foraged snails and fishes at the edge of the reservoir every noon. It also picked up dead fishes from the net. Sometimes it even bit at the dobbers of fishing nets. Many waterbirds, including the Little Egret (Egretta garzetta), the Chinese Pond-Heron (Ardeola bacchus) and the Grey-headed Lapwing (Vanellus cinereus) foraged for food with this stork. It was the most cautious among these waterbirds. It often stayed on high branches of Pinus massoniana trees. Only after other birds foraged for a long time, did it came down to the reservoir. This stork stayed in the Longjing reservoir for about three days and we never saw it after 6 October.

    The Asian Open-billed Stork is a waterbird not difficult to identify, commonly appearing in southeastern Asia, in countries such as Bangladesh, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam and India (Zheng et al., 2002; Robson, 2005; BirdLife International, 2009). The first record of the Asia Open-billed Stork was prepared by a Chinese birdwatcher, Yitian Wang, in Xihu lake, Dali City, Yunnan Province in October 2006. Since its first occurrence in China, the Asian Open-billed Stork had not been recorded during the following four years. The stork has, since then, been recorded three times in southwestern China this year. Six Asia Open-billed Storks appeared in Jinggu County, southwestern Yunnan Province in July 2010 and two were observed in Anshun County, southwestern Guizhou Province in September 2010. Baise City is adjacent to China's Guizhou and Yunnan provinces and Vietnam. The distance from Baise City to Anshun County is about 300 km, as the stork flies. Although the Asian Open-billed Stork is a colonial breeder, resident in India, it usually leaves its breeding place every December (Pramanik et al., 2009). Is it an occasional event for the Asia Open-billed Stork to migrate in exceptional weather, or is southwestern China a potential overwintering area? The questions need more surveys of this bird to be answered.

  • Barter M, Chen LW, Cao L, Lei G. 2004. Waterbird survey of the middle and lower Yangtze River floodplain in late January and early February 2004. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, p 102.
    Barter M, Lei G, Cao L. 2005. Waterbird survey of the middle and lower Yangtze River floodplain in February 2005. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, p 64.
    Barzen J, Burnham JW, Li FS, Harris J. 2011. How do Siberian Cranes and other tuber feeding birds respond to a flood-induced lack of tubers at Poyang Lake. Wetlands, 4: 6-8.
    Burnham JW, Barzen JA. 2007. Final technical report on preliminary data trends at multiple scales at Poyang Lake National Nature Reserve: 1998-2005. Siberian Crane Wetland Project: Regional Program Report 2712-3-4645.
    Burnham JW. 2007. Environmental drivers of Siberian crane (Grus leucogeranus) habitat selection and wetland management and conservation in China. M.S. Thesis. University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA, p 111.
    Callahan JT. 1984. Long-term ecological research. Bioscience, 34(6): 363-367.
    Cui XH, Zhong Y Chen JK. 2000. Influence of a catastrophic flood on densities and biomasses of three plant species in Poyang Lake, China. J Freshwater Ecol, 15: 537-541.
    Gil de Weir, K. 2006. Whooping Crane (Grus americana) demography and environmental factors in a population growth simulation model. Ph. D. Dissertation. Texas A & M University. College Station, USA, p 158.
    Goroshko O. 2012. Global climate change and conservation of cranes in the Amur River basin. In: Harris J (ed) Proceedings of the Cranes-Climate-People Workshop, Muraviovka Park, Russia, 28 May-3 June 2010. International Crane Foundation, Baraboo, Wisconsin, USA.
    Harris J. 2000. Siberian Cranes in old rice paddies by Poyang Lake. In: Li FS (ed) 2000 China Program Reports. International Crane Foundation, Baraboo, Wisconsin, USA, pp 63-67.
    Huang JG. 2011. Behavioral time budget of the overwintering Tundra Swans in the Poyang Lake. Undergraduate Student Project Paper. Jiangxi Normal University, Nanchang, p 12. (in Chinese)
    Huang SE. 2000. Monitoring seasonal changes in water bodies of Poyang Lake using satellite images. In: Liu XZ, Ye JX (eds) Jiangxi's Wetlands. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, pp 263-267. (in Chinese)
    Ji WT, Zen NJ, Wang YB, Gong P, Xu B, Bao SM. 2007. Analysis of the waterbirds community survey of Poyang Lake in winter. Annal GIS, 13(1/2): 51-64.
    Ji WT, Zeng NJ, Wu JD, Wu XD, Yi WS. 2002. Aerial survey. In: Wu YH, Ji WT (eds) Study on Jiangxi Poyang Lake National Nature Reserve. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, pp 157-166. (in Chinese)
    Li FS, Burnham B. 2008. Juvenile Recruitment rate of Siberian Cranes wintering at Poyang Lake in Winter 2007. China Crane News, 12(1): 21-22. (in Chinese)
    Li FS, Ji WT, Zeng NJ, Wu JD, Wu XD, Yi WS, Huang ZY, Zhou FL, Barzen J, Harris J. 2005. Aerial survey of Siberian Cranes in the Poyang Lake Basin. In: Wang QS, Li FS (eds) Crane Research in China. Yunnan Education Publishing House, Kunming, pp 49-57. (in Chinese)
    Li FS, Wu JD, Zeng NJ, Ji WT, Wu XD, Yi WS, Huang ZY, Zhou FL, Barzen J, Harris J. 2011. Number and distribution of large waterbirds determined by aerial surveys from 1998-2000 at Poyang lake. In: Li FS, Liu GH, Wu JD, Zeng NJ, Harris J, Jin JF (eds) Ecological Study of Wetlands and Waterbirds at Poyang Lake. Popular Science Press, Beijing, pp 106-118. (in Chinese)
    Liu GH, Zeng NJ, Wu JD, Wen SB, Gao X, Wang YB. 2011. Number and distribution of waterbirds determined by ground survey in winter of 2006. In: Li FS, Liu GH, Wu JD, Zeng NJ, Harris J, Jin JF (eds) Ecological Study of Wetlands and Waterbirds at Poyang Lake. Popular Science Press, Beijing, pp 144-152. (in Chinese)
    Liu XZ, Ye JX. 2000. Jiangxi's Wetlands. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, p 331. (in Chinese)
    Liu YZ, Jia DJ. 2000. Report on the distribution of Siberian Cranes at Poyang Lake in November, 1999. China Crane News, 4(2): 4. (in Chinese)
    Meine CD, Archibald GW. 1996. The cranes: status survey and conservation action plan. IUCN, Gland Switzerland and Cambridge, UK, p 294.
    Nichols JD, Williams BK. 2006. Monitoring for conservation. Trend Ecol Evol, 21(12): 668-673.
    Nolet BA, Bevan RM, Klaassen M, Langevoord O, van Der Heijden YGJT. 2002. Habitat switching by Bewick's swans: maximization of long-term energy gain? J Animal Ecol, 71: 979-993.
    Prange H. 2012. Reasons for changes in crane migration patterns along the west-European flyway. In: Harris J (ed). Proceedings of the Cranes-Climate-People Workshop, Muraviovka Park, Russia, 28 May-3 June 2010. International Crane Foundation, Baraboo, Wisconsin, USA.
    Qian FW, Jiang HX, Wu ZG, Li XM. 2009. Waterbird monitoring along flyway of Siberian Cranes in China. In: Prentice C (ed) Conservation of Flyway Wetlands in East and West/Central Asia. Proceedings of the Project Completion Workshop of the UNEP/GEF Siberian Crane Wetland Project, 14-15 October 2009, Harbin, China. International Crane Foundation, Baraboo, Wisconsin, USA.
    Qian FW. 2003. Siberian Crane wintering in China in 2002/03. Siberian Crane Flyway Newsletter, 4: 4.
    Shankman D, Davis L, De Leeuw J. 2009. River management, landuse change, and future flood risk in China's Poyang Lake region. Int J River Basin Manage, 7(4): 423-431.
    Wu YH, Ji WT (eds). 2002. Study on Jiangxi Poyang Lake National Nature Reserve. China Forestry Publishing House, Beijing, pp 231.
    Yan MH, Liu ST, Zhang W, Zong C, Lou J. 2012. Climate change and its impacts on ecological environment in Hulun Lake Area. Science Press, Beijing, p 243. (in Chinese)
    Zhou FZ, Ding WN. 1982. On the wintering habits of White Crane (Grus leucogeranus). Chin J Zool, 17(4): 19-21. (in Chinese)
    Zhu HH, Zhang B. 1997. Poyang Lake-hydrology, biology, sediment, wetland, and development/mitigation. University of Science and Technology of China Publishing House, Hefei, China, p 349. (in Chinese)
  • Related Articles

Catalog

    Figures(5)  /  Tables(2)

    Article Metrics

    Article views PDF downloads Cited by()

    /

    DownLoad:  Full-Size Img  PowerPoint
    Return
    Return