Cranes of the World: Japanese Crane ( Grus japonensis )

Other Vernacular Names: Manchurian crane, Redcrowned crane; Tan-ting ho, Hsien-ho (Chinese); Grue de Mandchourie (French); Mandschuren- Kranich (German): Tancho, Tozuro (Japanese); Manshuskiy zhuravl, Ussuriskii zhuravl (Russian); Grulla blanc (Spanish). Range: Breeds in northeastern Mongolia on the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johnsgard, Paul A.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/bioscicranes/21
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1021&context=bioscicranes
Description
Summary:Other Vernacular Names: Manchurian crane, Redcrowned crane; Tan-ting ho, Hsien-ho (Chinese); Grue de Mandchourie (French); Mandschuren- Kranich (German): Tancho, Tozuro (Japanese); Manshuskiy zhuravl, Ussuriskii zhuravl (Russian); Grulla blanc (Spanish). Range: Breeds in northeastern Mongolia on the border of Manchuria (Hahlin Basin) and eastwards through northern and central Manchuria to Lake Khanka and along the Ussuri to its mouth, and in the middle Amur Valley west to the Bureya or Gorin River. An essentially resident population also occurs in northeastern Hokkaido, Japan. The continental population is migratory, wintering in Korea and in eastern China (north of the Gulf of Chihli, and occasionally also the lower Yangtze and sometimes on Taiwan), with vagrants reaching Sakhalin (Vaurie, 1965; Yamashina, 1978). There is apparently also a small resident population near Pyongyang, North Korea (King, 1979).