Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Vultures of the World
View through CrossRef
This book provides an engaging look at vultures and condors, seeking to help us understand these widely recognized but underappreciated birds. It introduces readers to the essential nature of vultures and condors. Not only do these most proficient of all vertebrate scavengers clean up natural and man-made organic waste but they also recycle ecologically essential elements back into both wild and human landscapes, allowing our ecosystems to function successfully across generations of organisms. With distributions ranging over more than three-quarters of all land on five continents, the world's twenty-three species of scavenging birds of prey offer an outstanding example of biological diversity writ large. Included in the world's species fold are its most abundant large raptors—several of its longest-lived birds and the most massive of all soaring birds. With a fossil record dating back more than fifty million years, vultures and condors possess numerous adaptions that characteristically serve them well but at times also make them particularly vulnerable to human actions. The book is a global treatment of vultures, offering a roadmap of how best to protect these birds and their important ecology.
Title: Vultures of the World
Description:
This book provides an engaging look at vultures and condors, seeking to help us understand these widely recognized but underappreciated birds.
It introduces readers to the essential nature of vultures and condors.
Not only do these most proficient of all vertebrate scavengers clean up natural and man-made organic waste but they also recycle ecologically essential elements back into both wild and human landscapes, allowing our ecosystems to function successfully across generations of organisms.
With distributions ranging over more than three-quarters of all land on five continents, the world's twenty-three species of scavenging birds of prey offer an outstanding example of biological diversity writ large.
Included in the world's species fold are its most abundant large raptors—several of its longest-lived birds and the most massive of all soaring birds.
With a fossil record dating back more than fifty million years, vultures and condors possess numerous adaptions that characteristically serve them well but at times also make them particularly vulnerable to human actions.
The book is a global treatment of vultures, offering a roadmap of how best to protect these birds and their important ecology.
Related Results
Niche Distribution Pattern of Rüppell's Vulture (Gyps rueppellii) and Conservation Implication in Kenya
Niche Distribution Pattern of Rüppell's Vulture (Gyps rueppellii) and Conservation Implication in Kenya
ABSTRACTRüppell's vultures are critically endangered, primarily due to anthropogenic activities such as habitat degradation, climate change, and intentional and unintentional poiso...
Social Behavior
Social Behavior
This chapter addresses the social behavior of vultures. Vultures are considered social species in part because they often roost communally and feed in groups. One of two of the wor...
Movement Behavior
Movement Behavior
This chapter assesses the movement behavior of vultures. Short- and long-distance movements via low-cost, soaring flight allow vultures to expand their ecological neighborhoods con...
West Nile Virus in vultures from Europe
West Nile Virus in vultures from Europe
West Nile virus (WNV) is an arbovirus mainly transmitted by Culex spp., which causes a worldwide zoonotic disease. This pathogen is endemically maintained in a life cycle with bird...
"VULTURE, INDEED!"
"VULTURE, INDEED!"
How, now, Dr. Callanan! Wouldst picture us as vultures? Hovering to "devour"
Would you pull the tubes The life-giving tubes? The "magic" of medicine?
...
The use of social information in vulture flight decisions
The use of social information in vulture flight decisions
AbstractAnimals rely on a balance of personal and social information to decide when and where to move next in order to access a desired resource, such as food. The benefits from cu...
Threats assessment of vultures in Uttarakhand: A review note
Threats assessment of vultures in Uttarakhand: A review note
Etymologically derived from Anglo-French vultur, Old French voutoir, voutre from Latin vultur, earlier voltur, and perhaps related to vellere- "to pluck, to tear"-the generic name ...

