Yellow-billed Stork vs Oriental Stork
Mycteria ibis compared with Ciconia boyciana
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Attribute | Yellow-billed Stork | Oriental Stork |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Mycteria ibis | Ciconia boyciana |
| Order | Ciconiiformes | Ciconiiformes |
| Family | Ciconiidae | Ciconiidae |
| Conservation Status | Least Concern | Endangered |
| Length | — | 115.0 cm (45.3 in) |
| Wingspan | 92.5 cm (36.4 in) | 220.0 cm (86.6 in) |
| Weight | 1895.6 g (66.87 oz) | 5000.0 g (176.37 oz) |
| Diet | -- | Fish, frogs, snakes, large insects, and small mammals caught in shallow wetlands. Feeds by wading … |
| Clutch Size | 2-3 | 2-6 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Size Comparison
Habitat Comparison
Oriental Stork
Wetlands, flooded rice paddies, rivers, and marshes. Nests on tall trees, utility poles, and artificial platforms.
Song & Call Comparison
Yellow-billed Stork
Oriental Stork
Essentially silent like all storks; produces loud mechanical bill-clattering at the nest as a greeting display. Chicks beg with hissing and squeaking. Rarely vocalizes otherwise.
Geographic Range & Migration
Yellow-billed Stork
Oriental Stork
Breeds in the Russian Far East and northeastern China. Winters in southeastern China, Japan, and Korea.
Conservation Status
Yellow-billed Stork
Oriental Stork
How to Tell Them Apart
Yellow-billed Stork
Oriental Stork
White body plumage with black flight feathers. Red bare skin around the eye and black bill distinguish it from the white stork. Pinkish-red legs.
Long, thick, straight, black bill
About These Birds
Yellow-billed Stork
97 cm, wingspan 150–165 cm. White body with black flight feathers; naked yellow-orange face and yellow bill. Resident sub-Saharan Africa in wetlands, lake margins, and flooded grasslands. Feeds on fish, frogs, and invertebrates. Highly nomadic following rainfall; breeds colonially in trees or reedbeds.
Oriental Stork
The oriental stork is one of the most endangered stork species, with fewer than 3,000 individuals remaining in the wild. It was once widespread across East Asia but declined dramatically due to wetland drainage and pesticide use. Reintroduction programs in Japan and Korea have achieved notable success.