Great bustard
Great bustard | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Otidiformes |
Family: | Otididae |
Genus: | Otis |
Species: | O. tarda
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Binomial name | |
Otis tarda | |
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Range of Otis tarda Breeding Resident Passage Non-breeding
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The great bustard (Otis tarda) is a bird in the
Portugal and Spain now host about 60% of the world's great bustard population.[3] The species was extirpated in Great Britain in the 19th century, when the last bird was shot in 1832. Since 1998, The Great Bustard Group have helped reintroduce it to England on Salisbury Plain, a British Army training area.[4] Here, the lack of public access and disturbance allows them the seclusion they desire as a large, ground-nesting bird.
Taxonomy
The genus name Otis was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae;[5] it came from the Greek name ὠτίς ōtis[6] used for this species[7] taken from Natural History by Pliny the Elder published around 77 AD which briefly mentions a bird like it, it was also given the name ωτιδος ōtidos and the Latin aves tardas[a] mentioned by the Pierre Belon in 1555 and Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1600.[9][10]
The specific epithet tarda is Latin for "slow" and "deliberate",[11] which is apt to describe the typical walking style of the species.[12] The Latin phrase avis tarda "slow bird" is the origin of the word bustard, via Old French bistarda.[13][14]

Description

The adult male great bustard is amongst the heaviest living flying animals. A male is typically 90–105 cm (2 ft 11 in – 3 ft 5 in) tall, with a length of around 115 cm (3 ft 9 in) and has a 2.1–2.7 m (6 ft 11 in – 8 ft 10 in) wingspan. The male can range in weight from 5.8 to 18 kg (13 to 40 lb).[3][15] The heaviest verified specimen, collected in Manchuria, was about 21 kg (46 lb),[15][16] a world record for heaviest flying bird.[17] In a study in Spain, one male weighed as much as 19 kg (42 lb).[18] Larger specimens have been reported but remain unverified. Average male weights as reported have been fairly variable: in Russia, males weighed a median of 9.2 kg (20 lb); in Spain, males weighed a mean of 11.62 kg (25.6 lb) during breeding season and 9.65 kg (21.3 lb) during non-breeding; in Germany, males weighed a mean of 11.97 kg (26.4 lb); and the Guinness World Records has indicated that male bustards in Great Britain weighed an average of 13.5 kg (30 lb). Average weight of males is almost an exact match to that of male Kori bustards. Among all flying animals and land birds, male Andean condors (Vultur gryphus) may match or exceed the mean body masses of these male bustards but not their maximum weights. Furthermore, male swans of the two largest species (trumpeter and mute) may attain a similar average mass depending on season and region.[19][18][20][15][21][22] Among both bustards and all living birds, the upper reported mass of this species is rivaled by that of the kori bustard (Ardeotis kori), which, because of its relatively longer tarsi and tail, is both longer and taller on average and is less sexually dimorphic.[18] In terms of weight ranges reported, the great Indian bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps) also only lags slightly behind these species.[19][20][15]

The great bustard is also arguably the most sexual dimorphic extant bird species, in terms of the size difference between males and females. Adult male great bustards measured in Spain weighed on average 2.48 times more than females.[23] Going on mass, the only known bird with a higher dimorphism is the green peafowl (Pavo muticus) as the males are apparently near four times as heavy as females.[19][16] The female is about a third smaller in linear dimensions, typically measuring 75 to 85 cm (2 ft 6 in to 2 ft 9 in) in height, about 90 cm (2 ft 11 in)[22] in length and 180 cm (5 ft 11 in) across the wings.[3][21] Overall, the female's weight can range from 3.1 to 8 kg (6.8 to 17.6 lb).[21] Like male weights, females weights are quite variable as reported: in Germany, females had a mean weight of 3.82 kg (8.4 lb), in Spain, females had a mean weight of 4.35 kg (9.6 lb) and in Russia, females reportedly had a median weight of 6 kg (13 lb). The latter figure indicates that eastern birds (presumably O. t. dybowskii) are considerably less sexually dimorphic in body mass than in other populations.[19][18][20] Perhaps because of this physical sexual dimorphism, there is a skewed sex ratio of about 1.5:1 female to male.

An adult male is brown above, barred with blackish colouration, and white below, with a long grey neck and head. His breast and lower neck sides are chestnut and there is a golden wash to the back and the extent of these bright colours tending to increase as the male ages. In the breeding season, the male has long white neck bristles, which measure up to 12–15 cm (4.7–5.9 in) in length, continually growing from the third to the sixth year of life.
Distribution and habitat

These birds' habitat is grassland or steppe defined by open, flat or somewhat rolling landscapes. They can be found on undisturbed cultivation and seem to prefer areas with wild or cultivated crops such as cereals, vineyards and fodder plants. However, during the breeding season, they actively avoid areas with regular human activity and can be disturbed by agricultural practices. Great bustards are often attracted to areas with considerable insect activity.
The breeding range of the great bustard currently stretches from Portugal to Manchuria, though previously the species bred even further east in Russian Primorsky Krai. As a result of population declines across much of the range, more than half of the global population is now found in central Spain with around 30,000 individuals. Smaller populations are in southern Russia and the Great Hungarian Plain.[24]

Behaviour and ecology
The great bustard is gregarious, especially in winter when gatherings of several dozen birds may occur. Male and female groups do not mix outside of the breeding season. The great bustard has a stately slow walk but tends to run when disturbed rather than fly. Running speeds have not been measured but adult females have been known to outrun red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), which can reach a trotting speed of 48 km/h (30 mph).[25][26][3] Both sexes are usually silent but can engage in deep grunts when alarmed or angered. The displaying adult male may produce some booming, grunting and raucous noises. The female may utter some guttural calls at the nest and brooded young make a soft, trilling call in communication with their mothers.[citation needed]
Migration

Some individuals in Iberian populations make short seasonal movements of 5–200 km (3.1–124.3 mi), particularly males which appear to move in response to higher summer temperatures.[27][28] European populations are sedentary or make irregular movements in response to severe winter weather.[29][30] Populations breeding along the Volga in Russia migrate around 1,000 km (620 mi) to spend the winter season in Crimea and Kherson Oblast.[31] Populations breeding in northern Mongolia migrate over 2,000 km (1,200 mi) to Shaanxi Province of China.[32]
Great bustards often gather in larger numbers at pre-migratory sites in order to move collectively to winter grounds. In the Iberian Peninsula, migrating great bustards seem to choose different periods for movements based on sex.[33][34][35][36][37] No population is known to use the same grounds for wintering and summering.[38] Great bustards are strong fliers and reach speeds of 48–98 km/h (30–61 mph) during migration.[32]
Reproduction

The great bustard breeds in March, and a single male may mate with up to five females. Before mating, the males moult into their breeding plumage around January. Males establish dominance in their groups during winter, clashing violently by ramming into and hitting each other with their bills.
One to three olive or tan coloured, glossy eggs (two eggs being the average) are laid by the female in May or June. The nests, which are shallow scrapes made by the female on dry, soft slopes and plains, are usually situated close to the prior lek location. Nests are situated in sparse clusters, with a study in Inner Mongolia finding nests at a minimal 9 m (30 ft) apart from each other. In the same study, nests were placed at mid-elevation on a hill, at about 190 to 230 m (620 to 750 ft). Nesting sites are typically in dense grassy vegetation about 15 to 35 cm (5.9 to 13.8 in), likely for protection against predation, with extensive exposure to sunlight.[40] Eggs weigh about 150 g (5.3 oz) and are on average 79.4 mm (3.13 in) tall by 56.8 mm (2.24 in) wide. The female incubates the eggs alone for 21 to 28 days. The chicks almost immediately leave the nest after they hatch, although they do not move very far from their mother until they are at least 1 year old. Young great bustards begin developing their adult plumage at about 2 months, and begin to develop flying skills at the same time. They practice by stretching, running, flapping, and making small hops and jumps to get airborne. By three months they are able to fly reasonable distances. If threatened, the young stand still, using their downy plumage, mainly sepia in colour with paler buffy streaks, as camouflage. Juveniles are independent by their first winter, but normally stay with their mother until the next breeding season. Males usually start to mate from 5 to 6 years of age, although may engage in breeding display behaviour at a younger age. Females usually first breed at 2 to 3 years old.[3][39]
Diet
The species is
Foraging
In winter the feeding intensity increased and then decreased through the morning in both sexes, and was lower in flocks of males than in flocks of females. This sexual difference is greater where legume availability was smaller in central Spain.[47] Males that foraged slightly less intensively than females could compensate with longer periods of foraging and bigger bite size[48][49] that would allow them to obtain enough food relative to their absolute daily energy requirements. The size of morning foraging area is smaller in sites with more legume availability, likely because legumes are the most preferred substrate type.[47]
Mortality
Great bustards typically live for around 10 years, but some have been known to live up to 15 years or more. The maximum known life span for the species was 28 years. Adult males seem to have a higher mortality rate than females due mainly to fierce intraspecies fighting with other males during the breeding season. Many males may perish in their first couple of years of maturity for this reason.[21]
Although little detailed information has been obtained of predators, over 80% of great bustards die in the first year of life and many are victims of predation. Chicks are subject to
Occasionally, other natural causes may contribute to mortality in the species, especially starvation in harsh winter months.[57] However, major causes of mortality in recent centuries have been largely linked to human activity, as described below.
Population distribution

As of 2008, the global population numbered between 44,000 and 51,000 birds (Palacin & Alonso 2008), about 38,000 to 47,000 in Europe, with 30,000 or more than half in Spain. Hungary had the next largest Great Bustard population with about 1,555 in the year 2012, followed by Ukraine and Austria. Between 4,200 and 4,500 were found in east Asia.[24] In recent times, there have been steep declines throughout eastern and central Europe and in Asia, particularly in Kazakhstan and Mongolia.[citation needed]
Presence | Countries |
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Native | Afghanistan, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, China, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, North Macedonia, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain, Syria, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United Kingdom, Uzbekistan |
Regionally extinct | Algeria, Lithuania, Myanmar, Poland, Sweden, Switzerland, Kyrgyzstan |
Vagrant | Albania, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, Gibraltar, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia |
Presence uncertain | Lebanon, Pakistan |
Sizeable populations exist in
Agroenvironment schemes as unirrigated legumes fostered a population increase of great bustards in
Threats and conservation status

The great bustard is classified as endangered at the species level. There are myriad threats faced by great bustards. Increasing human disturbance could lead to habitat loss caused by the ploughing of grasslands, intensive agriculture, afforestation, increased development of irrigation schemes, and the construction of roads, power lines, fencing and ditches. Mechanisation, chemical fertilizers and pesticides, fire and predation by dogs are serious threats for chicks and juveniles, and hunting of adults contributes to high mortality in some of their range countries. Agricultural activity is a major disturbance at nest and, in Hungary, few successful nests are found outside of protected areas.[57]
Bustards, despite their large size, are able to fly at high speed and are often mutilated or killed by overhead electricity cables, which are placed in the West Pannonia region of Eastern Austria and Western Hungary just at their flying height. The electricity companies affected have buried part of the dangerous cables, and have marked remaining aerial parts with fluorescent markers to warn off the birds. These measures have rapidly reduced bustard mortality.[57][62] Bustards are also occasionally killed by collisions with automobiles or by entanglement in wires.[57]

The great bustard was formerly native in Great Britain and a bustard forms part of the design of the Wiltshire Coat of Arms and as supporters for the Cambridgeshire arms.[63] As early as 1797, the naturalist and wood engraver Thomas Bewick commented in his A History of British Birds that "Both this [the little bustard] and the Great Bustard are excellent eating, and would well repay the trouble of domestication; indeed, it seems surprising, that we should suffer these fine birds to be in danger of total extinction, although, if properly cultivated, they might afford as excellent a repast as our own domestic poultry, or even as the Turkey, for which we are indebted to distant countries."[64] Bewick's prediction was correct; the great bustard was hunted out of existence in Britain by the 1840s.
In 2004, a project overseeing the reintroduction to
Under the auspices of the
Notes
- ^ "proximae iis sunt quas Hispania aves tardas appellat, Graecia ωτιδος damnatas in cibis; emissa enim ossibus medulla odoris taedium extemplo sequitur." [Next to these are the birds that Spain calls tardae and Greece otides, which are condemned as an article of diet, because when the marrow is drained out of their bones a disgusting smell at once follows.][8]
References
- ^ a b c BirdLife International (2023). "Otis tarda". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2023: e.T22691900A226280431. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
- Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (2023). "Turacos, bustards, cuckoos, mesites, sandgrouse". World Bird List. 13.1. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
- ^ ISBN 978-84-87334-20-7.
- ^ "Reintroducing the great bustard to Southern England". RSPB. Retrieved 2015-12-26.
- ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1758). Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (in Latin). Vol. 1 (10th ed.). Holmiae (Stockholm): Laurentii Salvii. p. 154.
- OCLC 659731768.
- ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). "ὠτίς". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus Digital Library.
- ^ Pliny Natural History III Libri VIII-XI. The Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rachham, H. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 1967. pp. 328–329.
- ^ Belon, Pierre (1555). L'histoire de la natvre des oyseavx : avec levrs descriptions, & naïfs portraicts retirez du natvrel, escrite en sept livres (in French). Paris: Gilles Corrozet. pp. 235–237.
- ^ Aldrovandi, Ulisse (1637) [1600]. Vlyssis Aldrovandi philosophi ac medici Bononiensis historiam naturalem in gymnasio Bononiensi profitentis, Ornithologiae (in Latin). Vol. 2. Bononiae (Bologna, Italy): Apud Nicolaum Tebaldinum. p. 85.
- ^ Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). "tardus". A Latin Dictionary. Perseus Digital Library.
- ^ "Great Bustard (Otis tarda) – Information on Great Bustard". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
- ^ Turner, William (1903) [1544]. Turner on birds: a short and succinct history of the principal birds noticed by Pliny and Aristotle first published by Doctor William Turner, 1544 (in Latin and English). Translated by Evans, A.H. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. xvi, 130–131.
- ^ Turner, William (1544). Avium praecipuarum, quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est, brevis et succincta historia (in Latin). Cambridge: Ioan. Gymnicus. pp. 72–73.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-85112-235-9.
- ^ a b Naish, Darren (6 April 2010). "The Great bustard returns – Tetrapod Zoology". scienceblogs.com. Archived from the original on 23 November 2011. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
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{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ^ a b great bustards Distribution and population numbers International Technisches Büro für Biologie Mag. Dr. Rainer Raab, 16 January 2018.
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- ^ Block, B. (1996). "Wiederfunde von in Buckow ausgewilderten Großtrappen (Otis t. tarda L., 1758) Ringfundmitteilung 6/1995 der Vogelwarte Hiddensee". Naturschutz und Landschaftspflege in Brandenburg. 1/2: 76–79.
- ^ Watzke, H. (2001). "Der Zug von Großtrappen Otis tarda aus der Region Saratov (Russland) – erste Ergebnisse der Satellitentelemetrie im Rahmen eines Schutzprojektes". Vogelwelt. 122: 89–94.
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- ^ "Species factsheet: Otis tarda". Birdlife.org. BirdLife International. 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
- ^ a b "Otis tarda (great bustard)". Nhm.ac.uk. London: Natural History Museum. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
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- ^ Abdulkarimi, R.; Abbasnejad, H.; Ahmadi, M. (2010). "A Note on the breeding of the Great Bustard Otis tarda on Sootav Plain, Boukan, Northwestern Iran". Podoces. 5 (2): 104–106.
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- ^ Mitev, I.; Boev, Z. (2006). "Хранителен спектър на бухала (Bubo bubo (L., 1758)) (Aves: Strigiformes) в две холоценски находища от Североизточна България" [Food spectrum of the owl (Bubo bubo (L., 1758)) (Aves: Strigiformes) in two Holocene deposits of northeastern Bulgaria]. Historia Naturalis Bulgarica (in Bulgarian). 17: 153–165.
- ^ Mirzanejad, H., Gholami, J., & Qashqaei, A. T. (2018). Can Marsh Harrier Circus aeruginosus prey on Great Bustard Otis tarda? Zoology and Ecology, 28(2), 65-68.
- ^ a b c d e Bankovics, A. "Great Bustard Work Program of Hungary" (PDF). Cms.int.
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- ^ "2016: 232 Großtrappen in Deutschland" (in German). Förderverein Großtrappenschutz e.V. 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-04-03. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
- ^ "Zahl der Trappen im Nordburgenland hat sich fast vervierfacht" (in German). Lebensministerium.at. Retrieved 6 September 2013.
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- ^ Bewick, Thomas (1847) [1804]. A History of British Birds. Volume 1: Land Birds. Newcastle: R. E. Bewick. p. 372.
- ^ "Home". Greatbustard.org. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- ^ "New bustard chicks a 'huge step'". BBC. 2 June 2009.
- ^ "Salisbury Plain great bustard project EU funding boost". BBC. 19 January 2011.
- ^ "Great British bustards". Birdguides.com. 8 June 2022.
Further reading
- Gorman, Gerard (1996). The Birds of Hungary. London: Helm (A&C Black). ISBN 978-0-7136-4235-3.
- Meissner, Hans Otto (1963). Unknown Europe. trans. Florence and Isabel McHugh. London and Glasgow: Blackie & Sons. pp. 125–139.
External links
- Great bustard (Otis_tarda) media from ARKive
- CMS Great Bustard Memorandum of Understanding
- BirdLife species factsheet for Otis Tarda
- Field Guide Page on Flickr
- "Great bustard media". Internet Bird Collection.
- Great bustard photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)