Coucou Hibou — Home

How to welcome the Black Stork in your garden

Ciconia nigra · Ciconiidae

Tailor the advice to your garden

Enter your town to get native plant and nest box recommendations tailored to where you want to welcome the Black Stork.

Choose my location

About the Black Stork

The black stork is a large bird in the stork family Ciconiidae. It was first described by Carl Linnaeus in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae. Measuring on average 95 to 100 cm from beak tip to end of tail with a 145-to-155 cm (57-to-61 in) wingspan, the adult black stork has mainly black plumage, with white underparts, long red legs and a long pointed red beak. A widespread but uncommon species, it breeds in scattered locations across Europe, and east across the Palearctic to the Pacific Ocean. It is a long-distance migrant, with European populations wintering in tropical Sub-Saharan Africa, and Asian populations in the Indian subcontinent. When migrating between Europe and Africa, it avoids crossing broad expanses of the Mediterranean Sea and detours via the Levant in the east, the Strait of Sicily in the center, or the Strait of Gibraltar in the west. An isolated non-migratory population lives in Southern Africa.

Source: Wikipedia

Three ways to help

Black Stork: pages already created by town

Sources and credits

Open the interactive version