What kind of bird is the Lesser Flamingo? An updated explanation of its characteristics, ecology, and habitat. Birds found in zoos.

Africa

What kind of bird is the lesser flamingo that can be seen at zoos and animal parks? We will explain its characteristics, ecology, and habitat. It is the smallest species of flamingo and can be said to be a very familiar creature. Unfortunately, this flamingo, which lives in northwestern India and Africa, is designated as an endangered species.

What is Lesser Flamingo? About basic status

The lesser flamingo is a bird classified in the order Flamingidae and family Flamingidae. The scientific name is Phoenicopterus minor. Another name is Little Flamingo. The total length is 80-90 cm and the weight is 1.2-2.7 kg.

Japanese(和名)コフラミンゴ,コガタフラミンゴ
English(英名)Lesser Flamingo
scientific name(学名)Phoenicopterus minor
classification(分類)Ave、 Phoenicopteriformes、Phoenicopteridae、Phoenicopterus
鳥綱、フラミンゴ目、フラミンゴ科、フラミンゴ属
IUCN Status(保全状況)VULNERABLE
Length(体長)80-90cm
Weight(体重)1.2–2.7 kg

About classification

The lesser flamingo belongs to the genus Flamingo.

🔬 Classification class

  • 界(Kingdom):動物界(Animalia)
  • 門(Phylum):脊索動物門(Chordata)
  • 綱(Class):鳥綱(Aves)
  • 目(Order):フラミンゴ目(Phoenicopteriformes)
  • 科(Family):フラミンゴ科(Phoenicopteridae)
  • 属(Genus):Phoeniconaias
  • 種(Species)Phoeniconaias minor(コフラミンゴ、Lesser Flamingo)

About habitat

It is known that the lesser flamingo inhabits a fairly wide range from the African continent to India and Pakistan.

🌏 1. Geographic Distribution

Main Distribution Areas: East Africa to Southern Africa, Western Asia, and the Indian Subcontinent

Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia, Namibia, and South Africa

Asia: Western India and parts of Pakistan

Migration Habits: Moves between salt and shallow lakes depending on the season

🏞 2. Habitat Characteristics

Mainly lakes, salt, and alkaline lakes

Can also live in high-salinity and alkaline lakes

Shallow waters, suitable for filter feeding (eating algae and microcrustaceans)

Open environments

Prefers shallow waters with good visibility and safety over forests and tall grasslands

Living in Flocks

Often forms large flocks of thousands to hundreds of thousands of birds

🐾 3. Habitat Characteristics

Depends on salt and alkaline lakes, where food is abundant

Cyanobacteria, algae, microcrustaceans, etc.

Migratory Behavior and Adaptation to Water Level Changes

When lakes dry up or food becomes scarce, they migrate to other lakes in flocks

feature is? What kind of creature is it?

The lesser flamingo is the smallest species of flamingo and lives in alkaline and saltwater lakes. They are highly social animals, and Lake Nakuru in Kenya is world-famous for their large herds. The legs are bright pink. The flamingo has a large black part on its beak and is the most abundant flamingo, with an estimated number of 2 million flamingos.

🐦 1. Physical Characteristics

Body Size: The smallest flamingo

Body Length: Approximately 80-90 cm

Wingspan: Approximately 90-100 cm

Weight: Approximately 1-1.5 kg

Body Color: Pale pink to red

Feathers and legs become brighter as adults

Beak: Uniquely curved, adapted for filtering food

The tip of the beak is black

Legs: Slender and reddish

Neck: Long, stretched during flight and foraging

🌿 2. Behavioral and Ecological Characteristics

Living in Flocks

Forms large flocks of several thousand to hundreds of thousands of birds

Feeding Method

Filters algae and tiny crustaceans from shallow salt and alkaline lakes

Flight Ability

Capable of long-distance migration, traveling between lakes

Large wings adapted for gliding and flocking

🏞 3. Habitat Adaptations

Dependent on salt and alkaline lakes

Can survive in high-salinity environments

Equipped with a filter that efficiently consumes cyanobacteria and algae as food

Feeds in shallow waters

Long legs allow it to forage while standing

🧠 4. Overall Impression

Small flamingo-like waterbird that lives in flocks

Distinguished by its bright pink body color and curved beak

Forms flocks in salt lakes and shallow waters and migrates

What is the ecology like?

Lesser flamingos live by eating plankton and algae in the water. They lay only one chalk egg at a time in a nest made of mounds of mud. The lesser flamingo is very long-lived, living for about 50 years.

🌿 1. Habitat

Main Locations: Salt and alkaline lakes in East Africa, shallow lakes in South Africa, and the Indian subcontinent

Environmental Characteristics:

Can survive in high-salinity and alkaline lakes

Prefers shallow, open waters and feeds in groups

🌙 2. Behavior Patterns

Diurnal: Forages and flies during the day

Flock Life: Forms large flocks of thousands to hundreds of thousands of birds

Migratory Behavior: Moves between lakes seasonally (depending on food and water level)

Flight Ability: Adapted for long-distance flight, gliding and using thermal currents to move energy-efficiently

🦗 3. Diet

Filter Feeding: Filters food from the water with its beak

Main Diet:

Cyanobacteria (algae)

Microcrustaceans (such as Artemia)

Foraging Behavior: Stands in shallow water, bends its neck, and filters food with its beak

🏠 4. Breeding and Nesting

Nest: Builds a small earthen mound using lake sand or mud

Eggs: Usually one, at most two

Incubation Period: Approximately 27-31 days

Chick Development: Fledglings occur approximately four weeks later, and chicks grow with parental feeding.

🧠 5. Sociality

Flocking: Foraging, breeding, and migration are all performed in groups.

Defense: Gathers together to protect themselves from predators.

Communication: Communicates with the flock through calls and visual cues.

🐾 6. Ecology Summary

Diurnal, flock-living, filter-feeding waterbird

Adapted to salt and alkaline lakes and migratory.

Breeds in small earthen mounds, and parents provide feeding and rearing of chicks.

About Lesser Flamingo Chicks

This article provides an overview of Lesser Flamingo chicks (young birds) in terms of appearance, growth, and behavior.

🍼 1. Birth and Early Characteristics

Egg Number: Usually 1, at most 2

Incubation Period: Approximately 27-31 days

Weight and Size: Approximately 50-70 g immediately after hatching, approximately 10-15 cm in length

Feathers: Downy, gray to whitish; adult pink and red feathers have not yet developed

Beak, Legs, and Eyes: Small and pale

🌱 2. Growth and Development

Early Life: Carried and fed in the parent’s nest

Feeding: Parents feed them algae and tiny crustaceans that have been softened in their stomachs by mouth

Feather Development: At 2-3 weeks of age, their coat color approaches that of an adult, changing from gray to pink

Fledgeling: They begin to leave the nest at approximately 4 weeks of age and develop by foraging for food on their own

🐾 3. Behavior/Personality

Highly dependent on the nest: For a while after hatching, they barely move and are held by their parents.

Intra-nest movement: Within the first few weeks of life, they begin to practice flapping their wings and bracing themselves.

Foraging under the guidance of their parents: They continue to follow their parents and learn how to find food even after leaving the nest.

🌙 4. Ecological Points

Early life: Highly dependent on their parents.

Relatively fast growth, allowing them to leave the nest in about one month.

Flight and filter-feeding skills are mastered by the time they leave the nest.

Is the lesser flamingo an endangered species?

Unfortunately, the lesser flamingo is listed as an endangered species. At present, the main breeding grounds in Africa are suffering from air and river pollution, and the population is drastically decreasing. Recent numbers of lesser flamingos in Lake Nakuru and Lake Bogoria are thought to be affected by heavy metal pollution. It is a migratory bird that is protected under the United Nations Environment Programme.

🐦 1. IUCN Assessment

Classification: Near Threatened (NT) or Vulnerable (VU)

The IUCN Red List often lists this species as “Endangered” (close to the endangered category).

Reason for Assessment: Although the population is relatively large, it is dependent on specific lakes and wetlands, making it vulnerable to environmental changes.

🌏 2. Threats

Habitat Destruction and Environmental Change

Drawing, Pollution, and Reclamation of Salt and Alkaline Lakes

Habitat Reduction Due to Industrial Development and Agriculture Around Lakes

Impacts of Human Activities

Tourism, Poaching, and Lake Water Harvesting

Decrease in Algae and Microorganisms, Which Its Food Source

Climate Change

Frequent Water Level Fluctuations in Salt and Shallow Lakes

Changes in Migratory Routes and Impacts on Breeding Grounds

🧠 3. Conservation Status

Protected in Nature Reserves and National Parks

Conservation efforts are underway in key habitats, such as Lake Nakuru in Kenya.

Because it lives in groups, its population remains relatively stable when the environment is stable.

Continuous monitoring and habitat protection are important.

Can lesser flamingos be kept?

As mentioned above, they are extremely protected, so breeding them is extremely difficult. Let’s enjoy the zoo at the zoo, you can access information on events, etc. inside the zoo and see a list. Please note that there are often fixed periods.

🐦 1. Difficulty in Captivity

Large Flock Living Habits

Lesser flamingos live in flocks ranging from several thousand to several hundred thousand birds.

Small populations cause stress, which negatively impacts their behavior and health.

Unique Diet

They primarily filter cyanobacteria and microcrustaceans.

A specialized feeding environment (depth and water quality) is required.

Highly dependent on their habitat.

Specific water quality and water level are required, such as salt lakes and alkaline lakes.

Recreating shallow water feeding and salinity regulation in the home is difficult.

Migratory Habits

Long-distance migrations depending on the season.

Stress builds up in captivity due to their migratory instinct.

🏛 2. Laws and Regulations

This bird is close to being endangered and requires protection.

Special permits are required for import and breeding in Japan and many other countries.

Unauthorized breeding and sale are illegal.

🐾 3. Captivity scenarios

Zoos and wildlife sanctuaries

School-based, shallow-water, and filter-feeding environments

Kept for breeding programs, conservation, and exhibition purposes

Home captivity is not possible

Food, water environment, school-based lifestyle, and migratory habits cannot be replicated

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