![]() ![]() “If we’re not doing this, then we shouldn’t exist. And this is the heart of why a place like this exists,” she said. “This is, I think, what we should be all about. In 2009, ZooTampa became the first wildlife institution in North America to hatch one of these rare avians outside of their native range. And while that means you probably won’t see these storks any time soon, Tibbott says, the work of preserving this embattled species will quietly continue. These fascinating birds can reach 5 feet in height and are classified as critically endangered, with only 3,300 to 3,500 mature shoebills still living in the wild. The birds will be in a part of the park guests generally don’t have access to, where keepers care for a number of endangered bird species. All of them will likely join the Safari Park group later this summer. It feeds at night on small animals, including lungfish, frogs and turtles. It has a shoe-shaped bill with a sharp hook, a short neck, darkish plumage, and long legs. ![]() There are seven other milky storks at the zoo, including a chick that hatched earlier this year. shoebill stork (whale-headed stork) Tall, wading bird found in papyrus marshes of tropical ne Africa. An adult milky stork stands about 3 feet tall and can live up to 30 years or more in captivity. It’ll take them longer to learn how to fly and to acquire their characteristic yellow bill and red head. In about a month, they’ll make their first forays outside their nest. For now, each chick is essentially a cloud of white feathers with a black bill and an insatiable appetite for regurgitated food from its parents. It didn’t take long for the birds to start pairing up, with males and females preening one another and clicking their bills at each other - a stork’s way of greeting and courting a potential mate.Īround late May, one female began laying eggs, all three of which hatched between June 21 and 23. Wild frogs and snakes have snuck in, but that’s just fine, Tibbott, says, as the storks enjoy snapping them up, too. The ponds are stocked with live fish for the storks to hunt. Size: Height of up to 5 feet, with a wingspan of over 8 feet Weight: Typically between 4 to 7 kg (8.8 to 15. Those new arrivals joined six storks at the Safari Park in a large enclosure meant to mimic their native mangroves, lush with trees and long grass and ponds packed with papyrus and cattails. ![]()
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