Water-Loving Ibis

Narrator: Chris Genthree
 •  2 min. read  •  grade level: 8
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"And God created... every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that it was good" (Gen. 1:21).
Ibis are among the world's largest birds, some measuring as much as four feet from the tip of their beaks to the end of their tail feathers. All have long necks and legs with partly webbed feet. They eat mostly fish, frogs and snails captured by probing in shallow, muddy water with their long beaks. They will also eat large insects, mice, moles and small snakes. Farmers welcome them because of their huge appetites for these pests.
Some species live together by the thousands, grouping in trees or bushes in large, bowl-shaped nests built of twigs and interwoven sticks with a thin inner layer of grass. But some prefer to nest in single families in swamps and marshes or open forest areas. There are many varieties of ibis scattered from the southern United States through Mexico and South America, and Africa and Australia. With changes in seasons, some make flights of thousands of miles, while others remain in one place through summer and winter.
Two varieties in America prefer to make their homes in cleared areas of a forest or out in open, dry country. The American white is a large and pretty bird, almost solid white with black wing tips, red face and legs, and a yellow bill. The wood ibis is darker in color. Both kinds usually nest close to the Gulf of Mexico.
The Australian white looks much like the American white. It is noted for its practice of breaking a shellfish open by holding it firmly against a flat stone or hard surface with a foot, then using its tough beak as a hammer to break it open.
The bald ibis, found only in the mountains of Africa and the Middle East, has quite a color contrast to those named above. It is mostly greenish black except for a dash of deep pink or brown where its wings are attached to its body, as well as a deep-red head-top on the male. The head itself is pinkish, but the long down-curved beak, long legs and feet are light orange.
One that is worshipped by natives around the Indian Ocean from South Africa to Australia is the sacred ibis. The worship habit probably came about centuries ago when natives first noticed how these birds got rid of troublesome pests.
It pleased the Lord God, the Creator of all things, to place these and thousands of other bird varieties throughout the world, both for their usefulness and also as objects of great interest. Each has its particular place in the creation in which He delighted.
For those who know the Lord Jesus Christ as their Savior, there is a wonderful time coming in heaven when He will show us His wisdom and love in all He has done. Will you be there to hear that wonderful account?