Navigate Namibia-03
Navigate Namibia-03
  • Namibia
    • Overview
    • Language
    • History
    • People
    • Books
    • T's & C's
    • Links
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Tours
    • Accomodations
    • Activities
    • Car Rental
    • Self-Drive
    • Getting There
    • Travel Insurance
  • Nature
  • Parks
    • All
    • Northern Namibia
    • Southern Namibia
    • Western Namibia
    • Central Namibia
    • Eastern Namibia
    • Communal Conservancies in Namibia
  • News

Blue crane

Anthropoides paradiseus
Blue cranes inhabit the grassland and scrubland that fringe Etosha National Park Pan, usually in large flocks, with up 750 birds being recorded.

Blue crane

Introduction: Blue cranes (Anthropoides paradiseus) inhabit the grassland and scrubland that fringe Etosha National Park Pan, usually in large flocks, with up 750 birds being recorded. They roost at night in shallow water such as pans and dams, where they are highly vocal.

Distribution: Isolated in Namibia to Etosha National Park.

Diet: Pecks and digs with bill for small bulbs, grass seeds, roots, caterpillars, grasshoppers and locusts and their eggs, termites, worms, crabs, fish, reptiles, small mammals and frogs.

Description: Medium-sized crane with characteristic ornamental head plumes and a loud, trumpeting voice. Paradiscus is the Latin equivalent of 'paradise' as these birds were once believed to be angels. Anthropoides is a Latin word derived from Greek, meaning 'man-like'. Often confused with the wattled crane.

Breeding: Nests consist of a pad of vegetation on wet ground and a layer of small stones on dry ground. Females lay 1 or 2 eggs between December and March.

Size: 1.2m.

Weight: 5kg. Males are larger than females.

Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre

2nd floor, Ardeco Building, Nelson Mandela Avenue (entrance Bassingthwaighte St.)
Klein Windhoek
Contacts
info@namibian.org
Copyright © 2025.  Gondwana Collection Namibia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gondwana Travel Centre 1998-2025