birdlife-white-square-2birdlife-white-square-2birdlife-white-square-2birdlife-white-square-2
  • News
  • Birds
    • Common Coot
    • Common Quail
    • Eastern Imperial Eagle
    • Egyptian Vulture
    • European Bee-Eater
    • Eurasian Blackcap
    • European Honey-buzzard
    • European Roller
    • European Turtle-dove
    • Sociable Lapwing
    • White Stork
  • Countries
    • Europe
      • Albania
      • Austria
      • Bulgaria
      • Croatia
      • Cyprus
      • Greece
      • Hungary
      • Italy
      • Malta
      • Montenegro
      • Portugal
      • Serbia
      • Slovenia
      • Türkiye
    • Asia
      • Lebanon
      • Türkiye
    • Africa
      • Egypt
      • Kenya
      • Morocco
      • Zambia
  • Threats
    • Illegal shooting
    • Illegal wild bird trade
    • Nest robbery
    • Poisoning
    • Bird trapping
  • Our Mission
  • Migration
  • About
    • We are Birdlife
    • Our projects
  • IKB Newsletter
✕

The secret behind the White Stork’s mysterious ‘pit stop’ in Sudan

September 10, 2019
Categories
  • Sudan
  • White Stork
Tags
Sudan

Our #MagnificentStork’s journey is nearly at an end! But before it settles in its southern African wintering site, it’s taking a bit of a detour. At the start of the year, the White Stork travelled straight to its spring breeding grounds without distraction – but in autumn, its journey is different. After soaring the thermals for 23 days, the flocks stop off in southern Sudan and stay for several weeks or months before continuing down to southern Africa, where they will spend the winter. So why does the species take this unique pit stop?

White Storks arrive in southern Sudan or eastern Chad between September and October – right after the rainy season, and at the start of a period of drought. In contrast to Europe, where they seem to bring the spring with them, in autumn their arrival is not such a good omen for local people.

White Stork ©Manfred Heyde

Nonetheless, these changing weather conditions are one of the reasons the storks stop off this area. In Africa, insect abundance dramatically increases just after periods of rain. Swarms of moths and beetles can appear within just 24 hours of rainfall. But these swarms can disappear as quickly as they appeared: the density of locusts can plummet from 30 insects per square metre to only 0.5 within a few days. Travelling between savannas, floodplains and cultivated fields, flocks of storks follow these swarms over several kilometres, feasting on them as and when they appear.

Sometimes, these feasts are enough to persuade storks to stick around for the whole winter. In January 1987, within an area of just 25 km² in Tanzania, 100,000 storks descended to feed on massive numbers of African Army-worms. Almost no storks were seen in southern Africa that winter.

But usually, the bird starts leaving the area in mid-November, flying west into Chad or further down to South Africa. After surviving exhaustion, starvation, illegal shooting and electric powerlines along its route, our magnificent stork has finally reached it home for the winter.

Help migratory birds make it home safely EVERY year. Support our work

Share

Related posts

Stork slaughter in Lebanon photo by SPNL Society for the Protection of Nature Lebanon

©SPNL Society for the Protection of Nature Lebanon

October 30, 2020

How the illegal killing of birds is infecting social media


Read more

Valetta bird market ©BirdLife Malta

September 14, 2020

Flight for survival: protecting migratory birds from illegal killing


Read more
September 14, 2020

Rare and impressive: 7300+ White Storks in Cyprus


Read more
Stichting BirdLife Europe and BirdLife International gratefully acknowledge financial support from the MAVA Foundation, the EU LIFE programme, the European Commission and Vogelbescherming Nederland (BirdLife Netherlands).
All content and opinions expressed on these pages are solely those of Stichting BirdLife Europe.
"Flight for Survival" is partially funded by the LIFE Against Bird Crime project. More information is available here.

Over 25 000 000 million birds are illegally killed around the Mediterranean, Northern Europe and the Caucasus every year. For non-rounded, mean numbers, and minimum/maximum estimates, see: Preliminary assessment of the scope and scale of illegal killing and taking of birds in the Mediterranean (Brochet et al 2016) and Illegal killing and taking of Birds in Europe outside the Mediterranean: assessing the scope and scale of a complex issue (Brochet et al., 2018)

“Flight for Survival” is a BirdLife International campaign managed by Stichting BirdLife Europe to raise awareness about the illegal killing of birds in Italy, Croatia, Cyprus, Greece, Egypt, Lebanon, Bulgaria and Hungary, and their conservation activities to fight this.” The species storylines for this campaign are heavily inspired by the information available on the migration habits of the selected birds.

  • Privacy policy
  • About us
  • Cookies policy
  • Contact us
Stichting BirdLife Europe (SBE) manages the European and Central Asian division of BirdLife International. This website is provided by SBE for the BirdLife International Secretariat. SBE and BirdLife UK are joint data controllers for your personal information.
© 2019 Stichting BirdLife Europe - Flight for Survival. All Rights Reserved. Designed by Old-Continent