Until the late 1800s, this ibis nested over a huge area of mainland Asia and Japan. With the cutting of pine woodlands, where it nested, and the use of pesticides in rice paddies and marshlands, which were its feeding grounds, the bird's numbers declined drastically. It is now designated in Japan as a Special Bird for Protection, and in Korea as National Treasure No. 198. It also has full legal protection in the former USSR. Currently, there are about 40 birds in the wild which survive in South Shaanxi, China
Crested Ibis was created in 1835.
mama ibis
sixty-6
The crested ibis is an endangered species and nearly extinct. The adaptations of this bird include a near bald head with some red skin and white plumes on the neck. The ibis lives at the top of trees overlooking a hill in a nest.
The Japanese crested ibis primarily lives in Japan, particularly in the Sado Island and Sado Japanese Crested Ibis Conservation Center. Efforts are being made to reintroduce them to the wild in other regions of Japan as well.
crested caracaras r endangered because of habitat loss.
Blue red yellow
NO.
The sulphur-crested cockatoo, native to Australia, is not at all endangered.
yes
the scarlet ibis is endangered because hummans are destroying their home and catching and eating their prey
no