ML201851811 IBC 1482082
Contributor
Date
Location
- Age and sex
- Adult, Unknown sex - 1
- Behaviors
- Foraging or eating
- Sounds
- Non-vocal
- Tags
- Habitat
Media notes
Yellow-billed Stork and Nile Crocodile fishing together. The Yellow-billed Stork (Mycteria ibis) occurs in Africa south of the Sahara. It prefers wetlands, shallow lakes and mudflats and is often seen fishing in drying river pools. It feeds mainly on small fish that is catches and swallows whole, sometimes tossing its prey into the air and before catching and swallowing it. Yellow-billed Stork often fish open-billed, with one wing spread, stirring the silt with its foot to flush prey. This bird was fishing in Sunset Dam, Kruger Park when a large Nile Crocodile moved close to it, herding Tilapia fish towards the stork. Several large Tilapia were disturbed by the stork and jumped over the crocodile’s body – none were caught by either animal, and they were probably too big for the bird to swallow. Elevation: 287 m. Date added to IBC: April 1, 2018.
Collection
Technical information
- Camera
- Panasonic AG-AC160AEN
- Microphone
- RØDE NTG-3 Shotgun Microphone
- Accessories
- Original file size
- 82.88 MB