| Literature DB >> 35739905 |
Johannes Fritz1,2, Jiří Janák3.
Abstract
We trace the history of the endangered Northern Bald Ibis through different epochs to the present. A particular focus is placed on its life in and disappearance from ancient Egypt, where the bird attained great cultural and religious significance, and on the modern endeavour to re-wild the species. Due to the characteristic appearance, behaviour and habitat of the species as well as its need for open foraging areas, a close mutualistic relationship between humans and the birds was formed in ancient Egypt, as in other cultures. A clear benefit for the Northern Bald Ibis was the availability of feeding habitats, which were cleared by humans for farming or grazing. The benefit to people was rather cultural because the bird attracted religious veneration or symbolic meanings from ancient Egypt to medieval Europe. The proximity to humans, however, carried a high risk as well. We discuss various types of impact (including human impacts as well as climate change) as triggers for the extinction of the species. The evidence for a triple disappearance of the Northern Bald Ibis (around 2000 BCE, around 1600 CE and in modern time) represents a unique basis for studying both the bird's habitat preferences and its vulnerability. This is because different, mainly anthropogenic, causes stood behind these three historical disappearances, although the disappearances in all three epochs occurred during a period of climate change.Entities:
Keywords: Northern Bald Ibis; ancient Egypt; climate change; interdisciplinary approach; migration; restoration; translocation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35739905 PMCID: PMC9219447 DOI: 10.3390/ani12121569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Figure 1Portrait of an adult Northern Bald Ibis. Photo J. Fritz.
Figure 2The hieroglyphic Akh-sign from the tomb of Akhethotep (ca. 2400 BCE). Drawing by Lucie Vařeková.
Figure 3Various Northern Bald Ibis breeding cliffs; (a) Agadir, Morocco (photo D. Tome); (b) Birecik, Turkey (photo J. Fritz); (c) Kuchl, Austria (photo J. Fritz).
Figure 4Sunning behaviour. Photo R. Beck.