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Egyptian Vulture

 

Neophron percnopterus

SUBFAMILY

Accipitrinae

TAXONOMY

Vultur perenopterus [sic] Linnaeus, 1758, Egypt. Two subspecies.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Scavenger vulture; French: Vautour percnoptère; German: Schmutzgeier; Spanish: Alimoche Común.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

22.8–27.6 in (58–70 cm); 3.5–4.9 lb (1.6–2.2 kg). Distinctive contrasting coloration between white head and body and black flight feathers.

DISTRIBUTION

N.p. percnopterus: Europe to central Asia and northwest India, south to Tanzania, Angola, and Namibia; also Canary and Cape Verde Islands and Socotra. N.p. ginginianus: India and Nepal.

HABITAT

Frequents extensive open country of dry, arid regions: steppe, scrub, desert, pastures, and cereal crops. Also in flat mountainous areas usually at low to moderate altitudes, cities and towns (especially Africa and India). Nests in rocky areas.

BEHAVIOR

Usually solitary or in pairs but a hundred or more may congregate where food is abundant and at roosts on cliffs, trees or on buildings. In north of range migrate to Africa just south of Sahara and north of the equator. In India, Arabia, sub-Saharan Africa, Balearic and Canary Islands apparently sedentary or make local movements.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Opportunistic feeder, dependent on rubbish dumps and carcass disposal sites; carrion and refuse is main food. Less often, catches live prey, usually sick or otherwise vulnerable. Also insects, crustaceans lifted from the water and birds' eggs; large eggs broken by throwing a stone.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Usually, breeds as solitary pair but occasionally two nests in close proximity. Monogamous. Builds a substantial, untidy nest of sticks lined with wool, rags and hair in a cleft, cave or narrow ledge at height on a cliff, often overhung; also on ruins, date palms and other trees where no cliffs. Typically, lays two eggs in March–May (earlier in some areas); incubation 42 days; fledges at about 11 weeks. Unlike most raptors, regurgitates food for chicks.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not threatened. Population has undergone a general decline but may now be stable. Main European population is now Spain; main population is Ethiopia. Fewer carcasses, reductions in small prey species, poisoning and persecution all thought to be factors in decline.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

Its image was carved into Egyptian monuments but apparently the species was never worshipped, as was the more powerful Eurasian griffon (Gyps fulvus).

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WordNet: Egyptian vulture
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: small mostly white vulture of Africa and southern Eurasia
  Synonyms: Pharaoh's chicken, Neophron percnopterus


Wikipedia: Egyptian Vulture
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Egyptian Vulture
Adult in worn or "painted" plumage
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes (or Accipitriformes, q.v.)
Family: Accipitridae
Genus: Neophron
Savigny, 1809
Species: N. percnopterus
Binomial name
Neophron percnopterus
(Linnaeus, 1758)

Th Egyptian Vulture (Neophron percnopterus)[1] is a small Old World vulture, found from southwestern Europe and northern Africa to southern Asia. It is the only living member of the genus Neophron.[2] In Southern Asia this species is called the Scavenger Vulture.

Contents

Taxonomy

There are three recognised subspecies of the Egyptian Vulture:[3]

  • N. p. percnopterus, the nominate subspecies, has the largest range, occurring in southern Europe, northern Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia and the north-west of the Indian subcontinent
  • N. p. ginginianus, the smallest subspecies, occurs in most of the Indian subcontinent
  • N. p. majorensis, the Canarian Egyptian Vulture, the largest subspecies with by far the smallest and most restricted population, is found only in the eastern Canary Islands

Description

Adult in fresh plumage
Immature (behind) and adult
From John Gould's Birds of Europe

The adult Egyptian Vulture usually measures 85 cm from the point of the beak to the extremity of the tail feathers and 1.7 meters between the tips of the wings. It weighs about 2.1 kilograms.

The adult plumage is white, with some black feathers in the wings and tail. Due to its habits—stalking around carcasses on usually dusty ground to wait for its turn—the plumage dulls quickly, and birds before moult are beige rather than pure white. Also, individuals occasionally seem to "paint" themselves with soil containing iron oxide, as Lammergeiers do, turning their plumage a pinkish buff; hence the German name Schmutzgeier ("dirt-vulture"). Its facial skin is yellow, turning orange during nesting periods, and is devoid of feathers. The tail is diamond-shaped, so it is easily distinguished in flight.

The nestlings are dark brown and gradually become light until they reach adulthood at the age of five.

Distribution

An Egyptian vulture in flight
Two Egyptian vultures flying low at Hodal in Faridabad District of Haryana, India

Egyptian Vultures are quite widely distributed and may be found in southern Europe, in northern Africa, and in western and southern Asia.

They are partial migrants, depending on the local climate. If an Egyptian Vulture can endure the winter, it usually will not migrate. The species is not well adapted for cold weather due to its rather small size (see Bergmann's Rule).

Behaviour

Use of tools

The Egyptian Vulture is one of the species that are known to use tools. It uses small rocks to crack thick-shelled ostrich eggs by lifting a stone with its beak and hitting the egg in a strong swing of head and neck. This was proved to be part of their genetic behavior, an Egyptian Vulture with no previous contact with other vultures was able to use this technique successfully [4]

Feeding

Egyptian Vultures are scavengers, mainly feeding off carrion, but they also prey on small mammals and eggs. Due to its relatively small size, it needs to wait until other scavengers (such as the larger Gyps vultures, hyenas, and lions) finish their meal before it may start feeding. Its head and beak are well fitted for this situation. As with other vultures, it is believed that the bare skin prevents food from sticking to it. Using its long beak, an Egyptian Vulture can tear off small pieces of meat left by larger scavengers. The thin beak also can fit through narrow spaces between bones to get food that large-beaked vultures cannot reach.

Breeding

The Egyptian Vulture reaches sexual maturity at the age of five and breeds in the same manner as most other birds of prey. They mate for life. The nests are built in areas of cliffs and slopes on inaccessible ledges or niches in rocky walls. Both the male and the female take part in the nest construction. They use branches for the frame and upholster it with garbage and food remains (skeletons of small mammals, turtle shells, etc.). They carry the nesting materials in their beaks, unlike most other raptors, who use their talons instead. The nest is reupholstered continually during the nesting and brooding period. The female lays two white eggs with dark brown spots (94 grams, 65×55 millimeters) with a few days' interval between them. This usually occurs between the end of March and the end of April.

Conservation status

The Egyptian Vulture is declining in large parts of its range, often severely. In Europe and most of the Middle East, it is half as plentiful as it was about twenty years ago, and the populations in India and southwestern Africa have collapsed entirely. In the case of India, this apparently is attributable to the widespread use of the NSAID Diclofenac in veterinary medicine, which enters the food chain of the species; the drug is extremely poisonous to vultures. Consequently, this species was uplisted from Least Concern to Endangered status in the 2007 IUCN Red List.[5]

Cultural significance

In Ancient Egypt, the vulture hieroglyph

A

was the uniliteral sign used for the glottal sound (3) including words such as mother, prosperous, grandmother, and ruler.

In Egypt it is called the Pharaoh’s Chicken for two reasons. It looks somewhat like a scruffy white chicken in fresh plumage, and the relationship to the pharaoh is because this bird was the symbol of perhaps the oldest deity of southern Ancient Egypt, Nekhbet, who was considered the protector of the pharaoh, royalty, and Egypt and always shown with her extended wings. They referred to the bird as the Mother of Mothers, who hath existed from the Beginning and creator of the world. This vulture always was seen on the front of the pharaoh’s crown. After the unification of Egypt both she and Wadjet (another early goddess in the Egyptian pantheon who had the same role in northern or Lower Egypt) shared the location of the protecting deity on the new double crown that was worn by the pharaohs of every dynasty thereafter. The nurturing behavior of these vultures while rearing their young led to a view of them as model parents, and their lack of sexual dimorphism led the Ancient Egyptians to think, mistakenly, that they were all female and reproduced through parthenogenesis.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ali & Ripley (1983)
  2. ^ Supposed prehistoric species from the Neogene of North America are now placed in the genus Neophrontops (the name meaning "looks like Neophron") These birds probably were almost identical to the Egyptian Vulture in lifestyle, but do not seem to have been closely related at all.
  3. ^ Donázar, José Antonio; Negro, Juan José; Palacios, César Javier; Gangoso, Laura; Godoy, José Antonio; Ceballos, Olga; Hiraldo, Fernando; & Capote, Nieves. (2002). Description of a new subspecies of the Egyptian Vulture (Accipitridae: Neophron percnopterus) from the Canary Islands. Journal of Raptor Research 36(1): 17-23.[1]
  4. ^ Felix Rodriguez de la Fuente, "el Hombre y la Tierra" chapter 15 El buitre sabio (video in spanish)
  5. ^ See BirdLife International (2007a,b).

References

External links

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Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Egyptian Vulture" Read more