Senses: Vision and hearing are used when foraging. They will also eat immature monitor lizards and crocodiles, frogs, water snakes, rodents and even small birds on occasion. The preferred prey includes lungfish, talipia, birchirs and catfish. The water and vegetation are removed by manipulating the mandible side to side and the fish is decapitated by the sharp edges of the bill. The fish, along with a large amount of water and vegetation, is engulfed in the large bill. Favorite foraging spots include waters low in oxygen, where fish must surface more often. With its head down, using binocular vision, the bird will either stand and wait or walk slowly in the shallow water, often surrounded by grasses and papyrus. They can be found roosting in trees, but are usually commonly found on the ground near water.ĭiet: Shoebills spend the majority of their day fishing. However in some regions, they can be found moving seasonally between feeding and nesting zones. Food permitting, shoebills are non-migratory. They are somewhat reluctant to fly, but can be seen soaring on thermals over their territory. They have powerful wings which allow them to take off almost vertically. Even breeding pairs will feedĪt opposite ends of their territory. Shoebills tend to be solitary, silent birds. Partially nocturnal, it tends to be sluggish but is also a strong flyer and soarer. Wings are occasionally held aloft during hunting to assist in balance while the bird walks across unstable matted vegetation. A reinforced beak and skull act as a shock absorber during these violent thrusts. The bird flaps forward and plunges its enormous bill down simultaneously. The “collapse” is unexpectedly swift, generally lasting less than a second and is performed with immense power. Males are slightly larger than females and have longer bills.īehavior: Shoebills feed mainly by ambush, standing motionless for long periods of time before “collapsing” on the prey in a manner unique for a large fish-eating bird. Size: The Shoebill stork stands 3.5 – 5 feet (1.07 – 1.5 m) tall weigh an average of 12.3 pounds (5.6 kg) have an average wingspan of 7.7 feet (2.33 m). The legs are skinny and long, like the legs of most wading birds feet are unwebbed. Males and females have similar coloration with small crest or white tufts sticking out from the back of the head. It has yellow eyes and extremely long toes. The head is large in proportion to the body, and the many-colored bill is wide and thick, The hooked bill is 8 – 12 inches (20 – 25 cm) long, 4 – 5 inches (10 – 13 cm) wide and has cutting edges. This Channel is dedicated to Shoebill Videos.įor business enquiries, content submission or copyright concerns or disputes, please contact me.Description: Being entirely gray the Shoebill is easily recognized, even without its most distinguishable feature which gives it its name – a bill that resembles a hook-tipped Dutch clog. In fact, it is a formidable carnivore with an appetite for snakes, lungfish, catfish and even small crocodiles.Ī curved hook at the end of the Shoebills beak acts as a spear that delivers a fatal blow every single time.Ĭlaudio's Nature Travels Youtube Channel. The world population of shoebills is estimated to be between 3,300 and 5,300 according to 2012 statistics from conservation partnership Birdlife International.īut because the birds live in swamp breeding grounds and are very difficult to access, they are rare subjects for study. Its habitat is restricted to swampy areas of Zambia, Sudan, eastern Zaire, Rwanda, Uganda and western Tanzania. The shoebill is an unusual-looking bird that grows up to 1.5m tall with a wingspan over 2m. This amazing looking bird, is the Shoebill Stork, a dinosaur looking bird, with a death stare that will haunt you in your dreams.
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