Japanese cormorant

The Japanese cormorant (Phalacrocorax capillatus), also known as Temminck's cormorant, is a cormorant native to the east Palearctic. It lives from Taiwan, north through Korea and Japan, to the Russian Far East.

Japanese cormorant
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Suliformes
Family: Phalacrocoracidae
Genus: Phalacrocorax
Species:
P. capillatus
Binomial name
Phalacrocorax capillatus
(Temminck & Schlegel, 1850)

The Japanese cormorant has a black body with a white throat and cheeks and a partially yellow bill.

It is one of the species of cormorant that has been domesticated by fishermen in a tradition known in Japan as ukai (鵜飼) (literally meaning 'raising a cormorant'). It is called umiu (ウミウ sea cormorant) in Japanese. The Nagara River's well-known fishing masters work with this particular species to catch ayu.[2]

Eggs, Collection Museum Wiesbaden

Footnotes

  1. BirdLife International (2012). "Phalacrocorax capillatus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  2. Cormorant Fishing "UKAI". Version of May, 2001. Retrieved 2008-JAN-30.

References

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