Crane bird in the snow, for article on Siberian crane recovery

Critically endangered Siberian crane populations have increased by nearly 50% over last decade

One of the world’s rarest birds is making a remarkable comeback. The eastern population of the Siberian crane has grown from roughly 3,500–4,000 individuals in 2012 to an estimated 7,000 today — a near-doubling driven by coordinated efforts to protect the wetland habitats these birds depend on along their migratory route between Russia and China.

At a glance

  • Siberian crane recovery: The International Crane Foundation reports the eastern population has increased by nearly 50% over the past decade, with the latest counts from Russia and China suggesting numbers have nearly doubled to 7,000 individuals.
  • Stopover habitat protection: Conservation work has focused on identifying and securing wetland stopover sites along the eastern flyway, including Lake Poyang in China, which supports nearly the entire wintering population of the species.
  • Wildlife partnership: The International Crane Foundation, backed by the Disney Conservation Fund, worked with local partners in both Russia and China over the past decade to manage feeding areas and raise public awareness about the crane’s threatened status.

Why this matters

The Siberian crane (Leucogeranus leucogeranus) is listed as Critically Endangered. The species makes one of the longest and most grueling annual migrations of any bird, traveling thousands of miles between its breeding grounds in northeastern Russia and its wintering grounds in China.

The stakes are especially high because the eastern flyway is now the species’ last viable population. The western and central populations — which once migrated through Central Asia to India — have been effectively lost to overhunting. Every individual in the eastern flyway represents the species’ entire future.

“It is a wonderful feeling to have this Critically Endangered species thriving with such a strong comeback from near extinction,” said Rich Beilfuss, president and CEO of the International Crane Foundation.

What the conservation work looked like

The recovery did not happen by accident. Over the past decade, the International Crane Foundation partnered with organizations in Russia and China to map and protect the wetlands the cranes depend on at each stage of their journey. That kind of flyway-wide thinking — treating the whole migratory route as a single system — has proven essential.

Lake Poyang in China was a central focus. The lake supports nearly all of the eastern population during winter, making it a critical bottleneck. Conservationists worked to manage water levels and vegetation to ensure enough feeding area. They also developed school curricula and community outreach programs along the flyway to build local understanding of the species’ precarious status.

The approach reflects a broader truth in conservation: protecting a migratory species requires protecting the chain, not just individual links.

What comes next

Disney Conservation Fund support for the project ended in late 2024, which removes a significant source of funding. The International Crane Foundation says it will continue working at Lake Poyang, with plans to restore natural habitat, develop a water level and vegetation management plan for two sub-lakes within the Poyang system, and strengthen community engagement to reduce disturbances to the birds.

The threats that drove the eastern population’s earlier decline — climate change, dam construction, and wetland degradation — have not disappeared. Beilfuss himself noted there is “still much to do to keep this species thriving.” The recovery is real, but it remains fragile.

Still, a near-doubling of a Critically Endangered species in a single decade is rare in conservation. It shows what focused, cross-border habitat protection can achieve — and offers a model for other migratory species facing similar pressures along flyways around the world.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Mongabay

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