Vultures comprise two groups of carrioneating
birds. They are useful because they eat
carrion, which otherwise might decay and endanger
the health of other animals. The twenty-one
vulture species inhabit temperate to tropical regions
of the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Africa.
All vultures exhibit similar eating habits, behavior,
and appearance, including bare heads and
necks. Many also have somber-colored feathers.
Vultures of Europe, Asia, and Africa (Old World
vultures) arise from eaglelike birds. Vultures of
the Americas (NewWorld vultures), similar in appearance
to OldWorld vultures, are anatomically
related more closely to storks.
Some Characteristics of Vultures
Vultures have bare heads and necks and hooked
bills. Carrion is their main food, and on some occasions
they attack newborn or wounded animals.
Most hunt by long-distance soaring to scavenge
with their keen sight. New World vultures
differ from OldWorld vultures in their lack of the
ability to vocalize. Six species compose New
World vultures. Three live in North America: turkey
vultures of the southern United States and
northern Mexico; black vultures of the southwestern
United States and Central America; endangered
California condors; king vultures; Andean
condors; and yellow-headed turkey vultures of
South America.
There are fourteen Old World vulture species.
Among the most interesting are the cinereous
(with a color resembling ashes) vultures of southern
Europe, northwest Africa, and Asia; the similar
griffon vultures; white (Egyptian) vultures
found from the Mediterranean to India; and the
bearded vultures (lammergeiers) of Europe, Asia,
and Africa.
Vultures lack feathers on their heads and
necks, which keeps them free of gore fromcarrion.
Among New World vultures, several have interesting
appearances. Black vultures have black
heads and plumage, with white feathers under
the wings. King vultures, in contrast, have feathered
neck ruffs and yellow, red, white, and blue
heads.
California condors, the largest North American
land birds, average four feet in length, with
wingspans up to eleven feet. They have black neck
ruffs, bald, orange to yellow heads, and black
plumage except for white feathers under wings.
Andean condors are similar. South American
yellow-headed turkey vultures resemble North
American turkey buzzards.
Notable among Old World vultures are cinereous
vultures, about four feet long with bare,
pinkish heads and black feathers. They inhabit
Europe, northwest Africa, and Central Asia. Griffon
vultures are similar in size and appearance.
Egyptian vultures, two feet long, have yellow
heads and white feathers except for black wings.
They inhabit Mediterranean areas and are found
as far east as India.
Bearded vultures (lammergeiers) are especially
interesting. They live on Asian, African, and
European mountains. They have tan plumage on
the chest and stomach and dark brown wing and
tail plumage. Lammergeiers have red eyes in
white heads. Conspicuous black feathers surrounding
the eyes end in beardlike tufts and led to
the name “bearded.” These vultures average four
feet long and weigh up to twenty-four pounds.
Their huge wings allow soaring for hours on thermal
updrafts. Lammergeiers are unusual in building
large, conical nests on or in rock ledges or
caves. A mated, monogamous pair uses the nests
many times.
Life Cycles of Vultures
Most vultures nest on bare ground underneath
mountain overhangs, or in caves. They build no
nests, and females lay eggs on bare rock. After
hatching, both parents feed the chicks partly digested
carrion regurgitated into
their mouths. For example, Andean
(great) condors live in mountain
caves, and females lay one or two
greenish-white to bluish-white eggs
on the cave floor. Both parents incubate
the eggs until they hatch. The
scarcity of the California condor is
partly due to the fact that it lays
only one egg at two- to three-year
intervals. Young condors fly in six
months, but parents feed them for
another eighteen months. Andean
condors first mate at seven years
old, and at two-year intervals after
that. They are monogamous and
maylive for forty-five to fifty years.
Lammergeiers, as noted, are unusual
in building several nests used
over and over. The female lays her
eggs, incubates them, and feeds
chicks with the help of the male.
Marabous: Storks or Vultures?
Marabou storks (marabous) combine stork and
vulture anatomy and occur throughout Africa.
Adults are five feet tall. They have long, storklike
legs and sharp, straight bills. Their heads and
necks are vulturelike. Most marabou food is deer,
antelope, and zebra carrion.
Marabou plumage is gray on the back and
wings, with white bellies and ruffs encircling red
necks. Most inhabit African wetlands, rivers, and
lakes. Pairs build nests in trees or on rocky terrain.
Usually, three eggs are laid and incubated by both
parents. Chicks hatch during dry season when
carrion is plentiful. They stay with their parents
for six months. Marabous live for over twenty
years.
Vultures consume carrion, preventing decay
and danger to health. This activity is one of their
main ecological functions. Some vultures (such as
condors) eat live food, giving them another ecological
function, killing injured or weak members
of other species. This helps the species that are
eaten to select for individuals which enhance
long-term survival.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Accipitridae (Old World vultures), with
subfamily Aegypiinae (ten genera, twenty
species); Cathartidae (New World vultures,
five genera, five species)
Geographical location: Temperate to tropical regions
of the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Africa
Habitat: Mountains, deserts, and other regions
where carrion is available
Gestational period: Up to four months
Life span: Fifteen to fifty years, depending on
species
Special anatomy: No feathers on head or neck;
weak and blunt claws; New World vultures
lack larynxes and thus lack voices
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