🐦

Royal Spoonbill

Platalea regia

Least Concern
Chiều Dài Sải Cánh
70,5 cm
Khối Lượng
1731,6666666666667 g
Họ
Threskiornithidae
Bộ
Pelecaniformes

Giới Thiệu

The Royal Spoonbill (Platalea regia) is a large, elegant wading bird of the family Threskiornithidae, native to Australia, New Zealand, and parts of Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands. It is one of two spoonbill species found in Australasia, distinguished from the Yellow-billed Spoonbill by its black bill, face, and legs, as well as by its breeding plumage features. Adults are predominantly white, measuring 74–81 cm in length with a wingspan of approximately 120 cm. During the breeding season, both sexes develop a long, drooping crest of white plumes from the nape, and display yellow skin above and around the eye, along with a yellow-orange breast patch. The flat-tipped, spatulate black bill is highly distinctive.

The Royal Spoonbill inhabits shallow freshwater wetlands, estuaries, tidal mudflats, mangrove-lined creeks, coastal lagoons, and river margins. In Australia it is most abundant in coastal regions and along inland waterways in the eastern states, with breeding populations established in New South Wales, Victoria, and South Australia. The species has also colonized New Zealand, where it is now a regular breeder in Northland and elsewhere. It is a nomadic species that follows rainfall and flooding events across the Australian continent.

Foraging behavior is characteristic of all spoonbills: the bird wades in shallow water and sweeps its open, flattened bill from side to side in a scything motion, detecting small fish, aquatic insects, crustaceans, and other invertebrates by touch. It may also pick prey from the water's surface. Foraging often occurs in groups and the species will associate with other wading birds on productive feeding grounds.

The Royal Spoonbill nests colonially, typically in trees, shrubs, or reedbeds, often alongside herons, egrets, cormorants, and ibises. The nest is a platform of sticks. The clutch usually contains two to four white eggs with brown spots, incubated by both parents for approximately 21–25 days. Chicks develop rapidly and fledge in about 45 days. The species is assessed as Least Concern globally, with Australian populations largely stable, though wetland drainage and altered flood regimes have affected some breeding sites.

Physical Description

Measurement Value Imperial
Chiều Dài Sải Cánh 70,5 cm 27.8 in
Khối Lượng 1731,6666666666667 g 61.08 oz

Habitat & Range

Tình Trạng Bảo Tồn

Least Concern
IUCN Red List

Hành Vi & Sinh Sản

Làm Tổ

Nest type: PL. Incubation: 20-25 days.

Số Trứng

3

Phân Loại Học

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Aves
Bộ Pelecaniformes (Pelicans & Herons)
Họ Threskiornithidae (Ibises & Spoonbills)
Genus Platalea
Loài Platalea regia

Distribution

Royal Spoonbill has been recorded in 1 countries.

{# Distribution Map — simplified SVG world map with highlighted countries. Expects `country_codes` variable: list of ISO alpha-2 codes (e.g. ["US", "CA", "MX"]). Uses Alpine.js to toggle classes on country paths. #}
Hiện Diện Not recorded
{# Simplified country/region shapes — major landmasses with ISO alpha-2 data attributes. These are simplified polygon representations for visual distribution display. #}

countries highlighted

External Databases

Câu Hỏi Thường Gặp

Is the Royal Spoonbill endangered?
The Royal Spoonbill has a conservation status of Least Concern.
How does the Royal Spoonbill nest?
Nest type: PL. Incubation: 20-25 days.
How big is the Royal Spoonbill?
The Royal Spoonbill has a wingspan of 70.5 cm, weight of 1731.6666666666667 g.
What order and family does the Royal Spoonbill belong to?
The Royal Spoonbill (Platalea regia) belongs to the order Pelecaniformes and the family Threskiornithidae.

Similar Birds

Other species in the Threskiornithidae family

So Sánh

Explore More

Explore the Nature FYI Family