Roseate Spoonbill vs Australian Ibis
Platalea ajaja مقارنةً بـ Threskiornis moluccus
Side-by-Side Comparison
| السمة | Roseate Spoonbill | Australian Ibis |
|---|---|---|
| الاسم العلمي | Platalea ajaja | Threskiornis moluccus |
| الرتبة | Pelecaniformes | Pelecaniformes |
| الفصيلة | Threskiornithidae | Threskiornithidae |
| حالة الحفاظ | Least Concern | Least Concern |
| الطول | 81,0 cm (31.9 in) | — |
| طول الجناح | 127,0 cm (50.0 in) | 70,4 cm (27.7 in) |
| الوزن | 1500,0 g (52.91 oz) | 1895,0 g (66.84 oz) |
| النظام الغذائي | Small fish, crustaceans, aquatic insects, and plant material filtered from shallow water by sweeping the … | -- |
| عدد البيض في الوضع | 1-7 | 1-4 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Size Comparison
Habitat Comparison
الموائل المشتركة
Roseate Spoonbill only
Australian Ibis only
Roseate Spoonbill
Shallow coastal lagoons, estuaries, mangroves, and freshwater marshes. Nests in colonies in trees and shrubs.
Song & Call Comparison
Roseate Spoonbill
Low, grunting and guttural croaking sounds at nesting colonies. Generally quiet. Alarm calls are softer croaks. Vocalizations lack melodic quality; purely functional colony sounds.
Australian Ibis
Geographic Range & Migration
Roseate Spoonbill
Southeastern United States, Caribbean, Mexico, Central America, and South America to Argentina.
Australian Ibis
حالة الحفاظ
Roseate Spoonbill
Australian Ibis
How to Tell Them Apart
Roseate Spoonbill
Vivid pink body plumage with darker carmine on the wings. Bare greenish-grey head. White neck and back. Intensity of pink depends on diet.
Long, flat, spatulate greyish bill used for sweeping through shallow water
Australian Ibis
About These Birds
Roseate Spoonbill
The roseate spoonbill is the only spoonbill species in the Americas and one of the most striking wading birds in the Western Hemisphere. Like flamingos, their pink color comes from carotenoid pigments in their crustacean prey. Nearly hunted to extinction for their plumes in the 19th century, they have recovered substantially.
Australian Ibis
65–76 cm. White with bare black head; black wingtips; glossy blue-black ornamental plumes in breeding. Resident across Australia and New Guinea in wetlands, grasslands, and urban areas. Common and adaptable; increasingly abundant in cities. Feeds by probing for invertebrates and foraging in rubbish.