Outlook improves for wattled crane in South Africa

Outlook improves for wattled crane in South Africa

In what’s being hailed as a conservation success, the wattled crane has seen its conservation status in South Africa improve from critically endangered to endangered. Globally, the wattled crane (Bugeranus carunculatus) is listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, with an estimated population of 6,000 mature individuals in the wild as of a 2018 assessment. In South Africa, the cranes were once widespread, according to the South Africa-based nonprofit KZN Crane Foundation, but between the 1970 and 2000, their population fell to fewer than 200 birds, making the species critically endangered in the country. “Today their population has increased to above 250 mature individuals and it is continuing to increase, so it is now listed as Endangered,” Christie Craig, conservation scientist at the International Crane Foundation (ICF), told Mongabay by email. In a press release, the ICF said that in 2015, researchers had recorded about 267 individuals in an aerial survey mostly covering the province of KwaZulu-Natal, considered a stronghold for the species in the country. In 2024, the survey estimated 304 individuals. However, the ICF cautioned in its statement that “despite this positive trend in KwaZulu-Natal, the global population (including, but not limited to, South Africa) remains on the decline and urgent conservation attention is required to safeguard populations outside of KwaZulu-Natal.” Of Africa’s crane species, the wattled crane is the most “wetland dependent,” relying largely on intact wetlands and floodplain habitats and grasslands for its feeding, roosting and nesting, studies show. “The main threat they faced and…This article was originally published on Mongabay

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