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Egyptian vulture

The Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus), also called the white scavenger vulture or pharaoh's chicken, is a small Old World vulture and the only member of the genus Neophron. It is widely distributed from the Iberian Peninsula, North Africa, West Asia and India. The contrasting underwing pattern and wedge-shaped tail make it distinctive in flight as it soars in thermals during the warmer parts of the day. Egyptian vultures feed mainly on carrion but are opportunistic and will prey on small mammals, birds, and reptiles. They also feed on the eggs of other birds, breaking larger ones by tossing a large pebble onto them.

Egyptian vulture
Adult N. p. percnopterus in northern India
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Subfamily: Gypaetinae
Genus: Neophron
Savigny, 1809
Species:
N. percnopterus
Binomial name
Neophron percnopterus
Subspecies[2]
  • N. p. ginginianus (Latham, 1790)
  • N. p. majorensis Donázar et al., 2002
  • N. p. percnopterus (Linnaeus, 1758)
Distribution of the three subspecies
Synonyms

Vultur percnopterus Linnaeus, 1758

The use of tools is rare in birds and apart from the use of a pebble as a hammer, Egyptian vultures also use twigs to roll up wool for use in their nest. Egyptian vultures that breed in the temperate regions migrate south in winter while tropical populations are relatively sedentary. Populations of this species declined in the 20th century and some island populations are endangered by hunting, accidental poisoning, and collision with power lines.

Taxonomy and systematics edit

The Egyptian vulture was formally described by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Vultur percnopterus.[3] The genus Neophron was created by Jules-César Savigny in the first natural history volume of the Description de l'Égypte' (1809).[4] The genus Neophron contains only a single extant species. A few prehistoric species from the Neogene period in North America placed in the genus Neophrontops (the name meaning "looks like Neophron") are believed to have been very similar to these vultures in lifestyle, but the genetic relationships are unclear.[5][6] A fossil species Neophron lolis has been described from the late Miocene of Spain.[7] The genus Neophron is considered to represent the oldest branch of the vultures which consists of separated (or polyphyletic) clades.[8] Along with its nearest evolutionary relatives, the lammergeier (Gypaetus barbatus) and the palm-nut vulture (Gypohierax angolensis), they are sometimes placed in a separate subfamily, the Gypaetinae.[9][10]

Subspecies edit

There are three widely recognised subspecies of the Egyptian vulture, although there is considerable gradation due to movement and intermixing of the populations.[11] The nominate subspecies, N. p. percnopterus, with a dark grey bill, has the largest range, occurring in southern Europe, northern Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, and north-western India. Populations breeding in the temperate zone migrate south during winter.

 
N. p. ginginianus in flight, India

The Indian subcontinent is the range of subspecies N. p. ginginianus, the smallest of the three subspecies, which is identifiable by a pale yellow bill.[12][13] The subspecies name is derived from Gingee in southern India from where the French explorer Pierre Sonnerat described it as Le Vautour de Gingi and it was given a Latin name by John Latham in his Index Ornithologicus (1790).[14][15]

A small population that is found only in the eastern Canary Islands was found to be genetically distinct and identified as a new subspecies, N. p. majorensis in 2002. Known locally as the guirre they are genetically more distant from N. p. percnopterus, significantly greater even than N. p. ginginianus is from N. p. percnopterus. Unlike neighbouring populations in Africa and southern Europe, it is non-migratory and consistently larger in size. The subspecies name majorensis is derived from "Majorata", the ancient name for the island of Fuerteventura. The island was named by Spanish conquerors in the 15th century after the "Majos", the main native Guanche tribe there.[11][16] One study in 2010 suggested that the species established on the island about 2,500 years ago when the island was first colonized by humans.[17]

Nikolai Zarudny and Härms described a subspecies, rubripersonatus, from Baluchistan in 1902. This was described as having a deeper reddish orange skin[18] on the head and a yellow-tipped dark bill. This has rarely been considered a valid subspecies but the intermediate pattern of bill colouration suggests intermixing of subspecies.[19][13]

Etymology edit

The genus name is derived from Greek mythology. Timandra was the mother of Neophron. Aegypius was a friend of Neophron and about the same age. It upset Neophron to know that his mother Timandra was having a love affair with Aegypius. Seeking revenge, Neophron made advances towards Aegypius' mother, Bulis. Neophron succeeded and enticed Bulis into entering the dark chamber where his mother and Aegypius were to meet soon. Neophron then distracted his mother, tricking Aegypius into entering the chamber and sleeping with his own mother Bulis. When Bulis discovered the deception she gouged out the eyes of her son Aegypius before killing herself. Aegypius prayed for revenge and Zeus, on hearing the prayer, changed Aegypius and Neophron into vultures.[20] "Percnopterus" is derived from Greek for "black wings": "περκνός" (perknos, meaning "blue-black") and πτερόν (pteron, meaning wing).[21][22]

Description edit

 
Adult N. percnopterus in captivity showing white plumage.

The adult's plumage is white, with black flight feathers in the wings. Wild birds usually appear soiled with a rusty or brown shade to the white plumage, derived from mud or iron-rich soil. Captive specimens without access to soil have clean white plumage.[23][24] It has been suggested as a case of cosmetic colouration.[25] The bill is slender and long, and the tip of the upper mandible is hooked. The nostril is an elongated horizontal slit. The neck feathers are long and form a hackle. The wings are pointed, with the third primary being the longest; the tail is wedge shaped. The legs are pink in adults and grey in juveniles.[26] The claws are long and straight, and the third and fourth toes are slightly webbed at the base.

The bill is black in the nominate subspecies but pale or yellowish in adults of the smaller Indian ginginianus. Rasmussen and Anderton (2005) suggest that this variation may need further study, particularly due to the intermediate black-tipped bill described in rubripersonatus.[13][27] The facial skin is yellow and unfeathered down to the throat. The sexes are indistinguishable in plumage but breeding males have a deeper orange facial skin colour than females.[23] Females average slightly larger and are about 10–15% heavier than males.[26] Young birds are blackish or chocolate brown with black and white patches.[28] The adult plumage is attained only after about five years.[23]

Measurements
Nominate[28][26]
Culmen 31–34 mm (1.2–1.3 in)
Wing   470–536 mm (19–21 in)
  460–545 mm (18–21 in)
Tail   220–251 mm (8.7–9.9 in)
  240–267 mm (9.4–11 in)
Tarsus 75–87 mm (3.0–3.4 in)
Weight 1,600–2,400 g (56–85 oz)
ginginianus[28][26]
Wing   393–490 mm (15–19 in)
  455–505 mm (18–20 in)
Tail 228–251 mm (9.0–9.9 in)
Tarsus 72–85 mm (2.8–3.3 in)
majorensis[24]
Wing 485–554 mm (19–22 in)
Tail 240–285 mm (9.4–11 in)
Tarsus 73.5–93 mm (2.9–3.7 in)
Weight 1,900–2,850 g (67–100 oz)

The adult Egyptian vulture measures 47–65 centimetres (19–26 in) from the point of the beak to the extremity of the tail feathers. In the smaller N. p. ginginianus males are about 47–52 centimetres (19–20 in) long while females are 52–55.5 centimetres (20.5–21.9 in) long.[13] The wingspan is about 2.7 times the body length.[26] Birds from Spain weigh about 1.9 kilograms (4.2 lb) while birds of the Canary Island subspecies majorensis, representing a case of island gigantism, are heavier with an average weight of 2.4 kilograms (5.3 lb).[24] The Egyptian vulture is one of the smallest true Old World vulture, the only smaller species appears to be the marginally lighter palm-nut vulture (which may be an outlier from other vultures).[29][30] Additionally, the hooded vulture is only scarcely larger than the Egyptian species.[30]

Distribution and movements edit

 
N. p. percnopterus in flight (Israel) showing the characteristic wing and tail shape.

Egyptian vultures are widely distributed across the Old World with their breeding range from southern Europe to northern Africa east to western and southern Asia. They are rare vagrants in Sri Lanka.[28] They occur mainly on the dry plains and lower hills. In the Himalayas, they go up to about 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) in summer. In Armenia, breeding pairs have been found up to 2,300 meters a.s.l.[31]

Most Egyptian vultures in the subtropical zone of Europe migrate south to Africa in winter. Vagrants may occur as far south as in South Africa although they bred in the Transkei region prior to 1923.[32] They nest mainly on rocky cliffs, sometimes adopting ledges on tall buildings in cities and on large trees.[28] Like many other large soaring migrants, they avoid making long crossings over water.[33][34] Italian birds cross over through Sicily and into Tunisia making short sea crossings by passing through the islands of Marettimo and Pantelleria with rare stops on the island country of Malta.[35][36] Those that migrate through the Iberian Peninsula cross into Africa over the Strait of Gibraltar while others cross further east through the Levant.[37][38][26] In summer, some African birds fly further north into Europe and vagrants have been recorded in England,[39][40] Ireland,[41] and southern Sweden.[42]

Migrating birds can sometimes cover 500 kilometres (310 mi) in a single day until they reach the southern edge of the Sahara, 3,500 to 5,500 kilometres (2,200 to 3,400 mi) from their summer home. Young birds that have not reached breeding age may overwinter in the grassland and semi-desert regions of the Sahel.[38]

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
Immature (behind) and adult (from John Gould's Birds of Europe)

The Egyptian vulture is usually seen singly or in pairs, soaring in thermals along with other scavengers and birds of prey, or perched on the ground or atop a building. On the ground, they walk with a waddling gait.[28] They feed on a range of food, including mammal faeces (including those of humans[43]), insects in dung, carrion, vegetable matter, and sometimes small animals.[44] When it joins other vulture species at a dead animal, it tends to stay on the periphery and waits until the larger species leave.[26] Pairs may also scrounge for food from other vultures, particularly griffons. Recently fledged young will sometimes fly to other nests, competing with young vultures for food, stealing or even soliciting food from the (unrelated) adults bringing food.[45] Wild rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) form a significant part of the diet of Spanish vultures.[46] In the Iberian Peninsula, landfills are an important food source, with the vultures more likely to occupy territories close to landfill sites.[47] Studies suggest that they feed on ungulate faeces to obtain carotenoid pigments responsible for their bright yellow and orange facial skin. The ability to assimilate carotenoid pigments may serve as a reliable signal of fitness.[48]

Egyptian vultures are mostly silent but make high-pitched mewing or hissing notes at the nest and screeching noises when squabbling at a carcass. Young birds have been heard making a hissing croak in flight.[13] They also hiss or growl when threatened or angry.[49]

Egyptian vultures roost communally on large trees, buildings or on cliffs.[13] Roost sites are usually chosen close to a dump site or other suitable foraging area. In Spain and Morocco,[50] summer roosts are formed mainly by immature birds. The favourite roost trees tended to be large dead pines.[51][52] The number of adults at the roost increases towards June. It is thought that breeding adults may be able to forage more efficiently by joining the roost and following others to the best feeding areas. Breeding birds that failed to raise young may also join the non-breeding birds at the roost during June.[53] Allopreening has been observed in Canarian Egyptian vultures between mated pairs of individuals as well as pairs of unrelated and same-sex individuals, particularly females.[45]

Breeding edit

 
Eggs showing colour variation, chromolithographs by Georg Krause

The breeding season is in spring.[28] During the beginning of the breeding season, courting pairs soar high together and one or both may make steep spiralling or swooping dives.[26] The birds are monogamous and pair bonds may be maintained for more than one breeding season and the same nest sites may be reused each year. The nest is an untidy platform of twigs lined with rags and placed on a cliff ledge,[54] building, or the fork of a large tree. Old nest platforms of eagles may also be taken over.[28][13] Nests placed on the ground are rare but have been recorded in subspecies N. p. ginginianus and N. p. majorensis.[55][56][57]

Extra-pair copulation with neighbouring birds has been recorded and may be a reason for adult males to stay close to the female before and during the egg laying period.[58] Females may sometimes associate with two males and all three help in raising the brood.[59] The typical clutch consists of two eggs which are incubated in turns by both parents. The eggs are brick red with the broad end covered more densely with blotches of red, brown, and black.[49] The parents begin incubating soon after the first egg is laid leading to asynchronous hatching. The first egg hatches after about 42 days.[28] The second chick may hatch three to five days later and a longer delay increases the likelihood that it will die of starvation.[60] In cliffs where the nests are located close to each other, young birds have been known to clamber over to neighbouring nests to obtain food.[61] In the Spanish population, young fledge and leave the nest after 90 to 110 days.[62] Fledged birds continue to remain dependent on their parents for at least a month.[26] Once the birds begin to forage on their own, they move away from their parents' territory; young birds have been found nearly 500 km away from their nest site.[63][52] One-year-old European birds migrate to Africa and stay there for at least one year. A vulture that fledged in France stayed in Africa for three years before migrating north in spring.[38][37] After migrating back to their breeding areas, young birds move widely in search of good feeding territories and mates. The full adult plumage is attained in the fourth or fifth year. Egyptian vultures have been known to live for up to 37 years in captivity and at least 21 years in the wild. The probability of survival in the wild varies with age, increasing till the age of 2 and then falling at the age of 5. Older birds have an annual survival probability varying from 0.75 for non-breeders to 0.83 for breeding birds.[64]

 
18-days-old chick.

Tool use edit

 
Egyptian vulture using a stone to crack a large egg.

The nominate population, especially in Africa, is known for its use of stones as tools. When a large egg, such as that of an ostrich or bustard, is located, the bird walks up to it with a large pebble held in its bill and tosses the pebble by swinging the neck down over the egg. The operation is repeated until the egg cracks from the blows.[65] They prefer using rounded pebbles to jagged rocks. This behaviour, although believed to have been first reported by Jane Goodall in 1966, was actually already known to Africans and was first reported by J. G. Wood in 1877.[66][67] However, this has only been reported in Africa and has not been recorded in N. p. ginginianus.[13] Tests with both hand-reared and wild birds suggest that the behaviour is innate, not learnt by observing other birds, and elicited once they associate eggs with food and have access to pebbles.[68] Their ability to deal with ostrich eggs is utilized by brown-necked ravens which form groups that wait for the eggs to be broken before collectively mobbing the vultures and engaging in kleptoparasitism.[69] Another case of tool-use described from Bulgaria involves the use of a twig as a tool to roll up and gather strands of wool to use for lining the nest.[70]

Threats and conservation edit

 
Migratory and resident vultures at an urban garbage dump site in northwestern India

Healthy adults do not have many predators, but human activities pose many threats. Collisions with power lines, hunting, intentional poisoning, lead accumulation from ingesting gunshot in carcasses, and pesticide accumulation take a toll on populations. Young birds at the nest are sometimes taken by golden eagles, eagle owls,[71] and red foxes.[72] Only rarely do adult birds attempt to drive away predators.[73] Young birds that fall off of cliff ledges may be preyed on by mammalian predators such as jackals, foxes and wolves.[74] Like all birds they serve as hosts for ectoparasitic birdlice including Aegypoecus perspicuus[75] as well as organisms that live within them such as mycoplasmas.[76]

Egyptian vulture populations have declined in most parts of its range. In Europe and most of the Middle East, populations in 2001 were half of those from 1980. In India, the decline has been rapid with a 35% decrease each year since 1999.[77] In 1967–70, the area around Delhi was estimated to have 12,000–15,000 of these vultures, with an average density of about 5 pairs per 10 km2.[78][79] The exact cause of the decline is not known, but has been linked with the use of the NSAID Diclofenac, which has been known to cause death in Gyps vultures.[77]

 
The "sacred pair" at Thirukalukundram in 1906

In Italy, the number of breeding pairs declined from 30 in 1970 to 9 in the 1990s. Nearly all breeding failures were due to human activities.[80] In Spain, which holds about 50% of the European population suggested causes of decline include poisoning by accumulation of lead,[81] pesticides (especially due to large-scale use in the control of Schistocerca gregaria locust swarms), and electrocution.[24][82][83] Windfarms may also pose a threat.[84][46] Poorly designed power transmission lines in east Africa electrocute many wintering vultures.[85] A shortage of carrion resulting from new rules for disposal of dead animals following the outbreak of Bovine Spongiform Encephalitis in parts of Europe during 2000 may have also had an effect on some populations.[86][46] In Armenia direct persecution for trophy and for local illegal trade of animals as pets has been recorded.[31]

The population of Egyptian vultures in the Canary Islands has been isolated from those in Europe and Africa for a significant period of time leading to genetic differentiation. The vulture population there declined by 30% in the ten years between 1987 and 1998.[87] The Canarian Egyptian vulture was historically common, occurring on the islands of La Gomera, Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, and Lanzarote. It is now restricted to Fuerteventura and Lanzarote, the two easternmost islands. The total population in 2000 was estimated at 130 individuals, including 25–30 breeding pairs.[24][88] Island birds also appear to accumulate significant amounts of lead from scavenging on hunted animal carcasses. The long-term effect of this poison at a sub-lethal level is not known, though it is known to alter the mineralization of their bones.[89] In order to provide safe and uncontaminated food for nesting birds, attempts have been made to create "vulture restaurants" where carcasses are made available. However, these interventions may also encourage other opportunist predators and scavengers to concentrate at the site and pose a threat to vultures nesting in the vicinity.[90]

In culture edit

Egyptian Vulture
in hieroglyphs

The Bible makes a reference to the Egyptian vulture under the Hebrew name of rachamah/racham which has been translated into English as "gier-eagle".[21][91]

In Ancient Egypt, several hieroglyphs include the Egyptian vulture including what is listed as G1 in the Gardiner's sign list - U+1313F 𓄿 .[92] The bird was held sacred to Isis and Mut in ancient Egyptian religion. The use of the vulture as a symbol of royalty in Egyptian culture and their protection by Pharaonic law made the species common on the streets of Egypt and gave rise to the name "pharaoh's chicken".[93][94][95][96] The habit of coprophagy in Egyptian vultures gives them the Spanish names of "churretero" and "moñiguero", which mean "dung-eater".[48] British sportsmen in colonial India considered them to be among the ugliest birds, and their habit of feeding on faeces was particularly despised.[97] In British India they were known as "shawks" a contraction[98] of shit-hawk.[99] A southern Indian temple at Thirukalukundram near Chengalpattu was famed for a pair of birds that reputedly visited the temple for "centuries". These birds were ceremonially fed by the temple priests and arrived before noon to feed on offerings made from rice, wheat, ghee, and sugar. Although normally punctual, the failure of the birds to turn up was attributed to the presence of "sinners" among the onlookers.[28][100][101] Legend has it the vultures (or "eagles") represented eight sages who were punished by Shiva, with two of them leaving in each of a series of epochs.[102][103][104]

Footnotes edit

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  2. ^ Gill F, D Donsker & P Rasmussen (Eds). 2020. IOC World Bird List (v10.2).doi:10.14344/IOC.ML.10.2.
  3. ^ Linnaeus 1758, p. 87.
  4. ^ Savigny, Jules-César Savigny (1809). "Systeme des oiseaux de l'Egypte et de la Syrie". Description de l'Égypte. Tome 1. Vol. 1. p. 68.
  5. ^ Feduccia 1974.
  6. ^ Hertel 1995.
  7. ^ Sánchez-Marco, Antonio (2022). "Two new Gypaetinae (Accipitridae, Aves) from the late Miocene of Spain". Historical Biology. 34 (8): 1534–1543. doi:10.1080/08912963.2022.2053117. S2CID 247605500.
  8. ^ Wink, Heidrich & Fentzloff 1996.
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  15. ^ Latham 1787, p. 7.
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  52. ^ a b Ceballos & Donázar 1990.
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  62. ^ Donázar & Ceballos 1989b.
  63. ^ Elorriaga et al. 2009.
  64. ^ Grande et al. 2009.
  65. ^ van Lawick-Goodall & van Lawick 1966.
  66. ^ Wood, J.G. (1875). Wood's Bible Animals. William Garretson & Co. p. 343.
  67. ^ Baxter, Urban & Brown 1969.
  68. ^ Thouless, Fanshawe & Bertram 1989.
  69. ^ Yosef, Kabesa & Yosef 2011.
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  80. ^ Liberatori & Penteriani 2001.
  81. ^ Cortés-Avizanda, Ceballos & Donázar 2009.
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  93. ^ Ingerson 1923, p. 34.
  94. ^ Thompson 1895, p. 48.
  95. ^ Stratton-Porter 1909, p. 182.
  96. ^ Anonymous 1854, p. 80.
  97. ^ Dewar 1906.
  98. ^ Partridge, Eric (2003). The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang. Routledge. p. 4709.
  99. ^ Dewar, Douglas (1915). Birds of the Indian Hills. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head. p. 222.
  100. ^ Neelakantan 1977.
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Cited works

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External links edit

  • BTO BirdFacts – Egyptian Vulture
  • Egyptian Vulture species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds.
  • Egyptian Vulture – Global Raptor Information Network
  • "Egyptian vulture media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Egyptian vulture photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)

egyptian, vulture, this, article, about, species, vulture, ancient, egyptian, hieroglyph, vulture, hieroglyph, neophron, percnopterus, also, called, white, scavenger, vulture, pharaoh, chicken, small, world, vulture, only, member, genus, neophron, widely, dist. This article is about the Egyptian vulture species of vulture For the Ancient Egyptian hieroglyph see Vulture hieroglyph The Egyptian vulture Neophron percnopterus also called the white scavenger vulture or pharaoh s chicken is a small Old World vulture and the only member of the genus Neophron It is widely distributed from the Iberian Peninsula North Africa West Asia and India The contrasting underwing pattern and wedge shaped tail make it distinctive in flight as it soars in thermals during the warmer parts of the day Egyptian vultures feed mainly on carrion but are opportunistic and will prey on small mammals birds and reptiles They also feed on the eggs of other birds breaking larger ones by tossing a large pebble onto them Egyptian vultureAdult N p percnopterus in northern IndiaConservation statusEndangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder AccipitriformesFamily AccipitridaeSubfamily GypaetinaeGenus NeophronSavigny 1809Species N percnopterusBinomial nameNeophron percnopterus Linnaeus 1758 Subspecies 2 N p ginginianus Latham 1790 N p majorensis Donazar et al 2002 N p percnopterus Linnaeus 1758 Distribution of the three subspeciesSynonymsVultur percnopterus Linnaeus 1758The use of tools is rare in birds and apart from the use of a pebble as a hammer Egyptian vultures also use twigs to roll up wool for use in their nest Egyptian vultures that breed in the temperate regions migrate south in winter while tropical populations are relatively sedentary Populations of this species declined in the 20th century and some island populations are endangered by hunting accidental poisoning and collision with power lines Contents 1 Taxonomy and systematics 1 1 Subspecies 1 2 Etymology 2 Description 3 Distribution and movements 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Tool use 5 Threats and conservation 6 In culture 7 Footnotes 8 External linksTaxonomy and systematics editThe Egyptian vulture was formally described by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Vultur percnopterus 3 The genus Neophron was created by Jules Cesar Savigny in the first natural history volume of the Description de l Egypte 1809 4 The genus Neophron contains only a single extant species A few prehistoric species from the Neogene period in North America placed in the genus Neophrontops the name meaning looks like Neophron are believed to have been very similar to these vultures in lifestyle but the genetic relationships are unclear 5 6 A fossil species Neophron lolis has been described from the late Miocene of Spain 7 The genus Neophron is considered to represent the oldest branch of the vultures which consists of separated or polyphyletic clades 8 Along with its nearest evolutionary relatives the lammergeier Gypaetus barbatus and the palm nut vulture Gypohierax angolensis they are sometimes placed in a separate subfamily the Gypaetinae 9 10 Subspecies edit There are three widely recognised subspecies of the Egyptian vulture although there is considerable gradation due to movement and intermixing of the populations 11 The nominate subspecies N p percnopterus with a dark grey bill has the largest range occurring in southern Europe northern Africa the Middle East Central Asia and north western India Populations breeding in the temperate zone migrate south during winter nbsp N p ginginianus in flight IndiaThe Indian subcontinent is the range of subspecies N p ginginianus the smallest of the three subspecies which is identifiable by a pale yellow bill 12 13 The subspecies name is derived from Gingee in southern India from where the French explorer Pierre Sonnerat described it as Le Vautour de Gingi and it was given a Latin name by John Latham in his Index Ornithologicus 1790 14 15 A small population that is found only in the eastern Canary Islands was found to be genetically distinct and identified as a new subspecies N p majorensis in 2002 Known locally as the guirre they are genetically more distant from N p percnopterus significantly greater even than N p ginginianus is from N p percnopterus Unlike neighbouring populations in Africa and southern Europe it is non migratory and consistently larger in size The subspecies name majorensis is derived from Majorata the ancient name for the island of Fuerteventura The island was named by Spanish conquerors in the 15th century after the Majos the main native Guanche tribe there 11 16 One study in 2010 suggested that the species established on the island about 2 500 years ago when the island was first colonized by humans 17 Nikolai Zarudny and Harms described a subspecies rubripersonatus from Baluchistan in 1902 This was described as having a deeper reddish orange skin 18 on the head and a yellow tipped dark bill This has rarely been considered a valid subspecies but the intermediate pattern of bill colouration suggests intermixing of subspecies 19 13 Etymology edit The genus name is derived from Greek mythology Timandra was the mother of Neophron Aegypius was a friend of Neophron and about the same age It upset Neophron to know that his mother Timandra was having a love affair with Aegypius Seeking revenge Neophron made advances towards Aegypius mother Bulis Neophron succeeded and enticed Bulis into entering the dark chamber where his mother and Aegypius were to meet soon Neophron then distracted his mother tricking Aegypius into entering the chamber and sleeping with his own mother Bulis When Bulis discovered the deception she gouged out the eyes of her son Aegypius before killing herself Aegypius prayed for revenge and Zeus on hearing the prayer changed Aegypius and Neophron into vultures 20 Percnopterus is derived from Greek for black wings perknos perknos meaning blue black and pteron pteron meaning wing 21 22 Description edit nbsp Adult N percnopterus in captivity showing white plumage The adult s plumage is white with black flight feathers in the wings Wild birds usually appear soiled with a rusty or brown shade to the white plumage derived from mud or iron rich soil Captive specimens without access to soil have clean white plumage 23 24 It has been suggested as a case of cosmetic colouration 25 The bill is slender and long and the tip of the upper mandible is hooked The nostril is an elongated horizontal slit The neck feathers are long and form a hackle The wings are pointed with the third primary being the longest the tail is wedge shaped The legs are pink in adults and grey in juveniles 26 The claws are long and straight and the third and fourth toes are slightly webbed at the base The bill is black in the nominate subspecies but pale or yellowish in adults of the smaller Indian ginginianus Rasmussen and Anderton 2005 suggest that this variation may need further study particularly due to the intermediate black tipped bill described in rubripersonatus 13 27 The facial skin is yellow and unfeathered down to the throat The sexes are indistinguishable in plumage but breeding males have a deeper orange facial skin colour than females 23 Females average slightly larger and are about 10 15 heavier than males 26 Young birds are blackish or chocolate brown with black and white patches 28 The adult plumage is attained only after about five years 23 MeasurementsNominate 28 26 Culmen 31 34 mm 1 2 1 3 in Wing nbsp 470 536 mm 19 21 in nbsp 460 545 mm 18 21 in Tail nbsp 220 251 mm 8 7 9 9 in nbsp 240 267 mm 9 4 11 in Tarsus 75 87 mm 3 0 3 4 in Weight 1 600 2 400 g 56 85 oz ginginianus 28 26 Wing nbsp 393 490 mm 15 19 in nbsp 455 505 mm 18 20 in Tail 228 251 mm 9 0 9 9 in Tarsus 72 85 mm 2 8 3 3 in majorensis 24 Wing 485 554 mm 19 22 in Tail 240 285 mm 9 4 11 in Tarsus 73 5 93 mm 2 9 3 7 in Weight 1 900 2 850 g 67 100 oz The adult Egyptian vulture measures 47 65 centimetres 19 26 in from the point of the beak to the extremity of the tail feathers In the smaller N p ginginianus males are about 47 52 centimetres 19 20 in long while females are 52 55 5 centimetres 20 5 21 9 in long 13 The wingspan is about 2 7 times the body length 26 Birds from Spain weigh about 1 9 kilograms 4 2 lb while birds of the Canary Island subspecies majorensis representing a case of island gigantism are heavier with an average weight of 2 4 kilograms 5 3 lb 24 The Egyptian vulture is one of the smallest true Old World vulture the only smaller species appears to be the marginally lighter palm nut vulture which may be an outlier from other vultures 29 30 Additionally the hooded vulture is only scarcely larger than the Egyptian species 30 Distribution and movements edit nbsp N p percnopterus in flight Israel showing the characteristic wing and tail shape Egyptian vultures are widely distributed across the Old World with their breeding range from southern Europe to northern Africa east to western and southern Asia They are rare vagrants in Sri Lanka 28 They occur mainly on the dry plains and lower hills In the Himalayas they go up to about 2 000 metres 6 600 ft in summer In Armenia breeding pairs have been found up to 2 300 meters a s l 31 Most Egyptian vultures in the subtropical zone of Europe migrate south to Africa in winter Vagrants may occur as far south as in South Africa although they bred in the Transkei region prior to 1923 32 They nest mainly on rocky cliffs sometimes adopting ledges on tall buildings in cities and on large trees 28 Like many other large soaring migrants they avoid making long crossings over water 33 34 Italian birds cross over through Sicily and into Tunisia making short sea crossings by passing through the islands of Marettimo and Pantelleria with rare stops on the island country of Malta 35 36 Those that migrate through the Iberian Peninsula cross into Africa over the Strait of Gibraltar while others cross further east through the Levant 37 38 26 In summer some African birds fly further north into Europe and vagrants have been recorded in England 39 40 Ireland 41 and southern Sweden 42 Migrating birds can sometimes cover 500 kilometres 310 mi in a single day until they reach the southern edge of the Sahara 3 500 to 5 500 kilometres 2 200 to 3 400 mi from their summer home Young birds that have not reached breeding age may overwinter in the grassland and semi desert regions of the Sahel 38 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp Immature behind and adult from John Gould s Birds of Europe The Egyptian vulture is usually seen singly or in pairs soaring in thermals along with other scavengers and birds of prey or perched on the ground or atop a building On the ground they walk with a waddling gait 28 They feed on a range of food including mammal faeces including those of humans 43 insects in dung carrion vegetable matter and sometimes small animals 44 When it joins other vulture species at a dead animal it tends to stay on the periphery and waits until the larger species leave 26 Pairs may also scrounge for food from other vultures particularly griffons Recently fledged young will sometimes fly to other nests competing with young vultures for food stealing or even soliciting food from the unrelated adults bringing food 45 Wild rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus form a significant part of the diet of Spanish vultures 46 In the Iberian Peninsula landfills are an important food source with the vultures more likely to occupy territories close to landfill sites 47 Studies suggest that they feed on ungulate faeces to obtain carotenoid pigments responsible for their bright yellow and orange facial skin The ability to assimilate carotenoid pigments may serve as a reliable signal of fitness 48 Egyptian vultures are mostly silent but make high pitched mewing or hissing notes at the nest and screeching noises when squabbling at a carcass Young birds have been heard making a hissing croak in flight 13 They also hiss or growl when threatened or angry 49 Egyptian vultures roost communally on large trees buildings or on cliffs 13 Roost sites are usually chosen close to a dump site or other suitable foraging area In Spain and Morocco 50 summer roosts are formed mainly by immature birds The favourite roost trees tended to be large dead pines 51 52 The number of adults at the roost increases towards June It is thought that breeding adults may be able to forage more efficiently by joining the roost and following others to the best feeding areas Breeding birds that failed to raise young may also join the non breeding birds at the roost during June 53 Allopreening has been observed in Canarian Egyptian vultures between mated pairs of individuals as well as pairs of unrelated and same sex individuals particularly females 45 Breeding edit nbsp Eggs showing colour variation chromolithographs by Georg KrauseThe breeding season is in spring 28 During the beginning of the breeding season courting pairs soar high together and one or both may make steep spiralling or swooping dives 26 The birds are monogamous and pair bonds may be maintained for more than one breeding season and the same nest sites may be reused each year The nest is an untidy platform of twigs lined with rags and placed on a cliff ledge 54 building or the fork of a large tree Old nest platforms of eagles may also be taken over 28 13 Nests placed on the ground are rare but have been recorded in subspecies N p ginginianus and N p majorensis 55 56 57 Extra pair copulation with neighbouring birds has been recorded and may be a reason for adult males to stay close to the female before and during the egg laying period 58 Females may sometimes associate with two males and all three help in raising the brood 59 The typical clutch consists of two eggs which are incubated in turns by both parents The eggs are brick red with the broad end covered more densely with blotches of red brown and black 49 The parents begin incubating soon after the first egg is laid leading to asynchronous hatching The first egg hatches after about 42 days 28 The second chick may hatch three to five days later and a longer delay increases the likelihood that it will die of starvation 60 In cliffs where the nests are located close to each other young birds have been known to clamber over to neighbouring nests to obtain food 61 In the Spanish population young fledge and leave the nest after 90 to 110 days 62 Fledged birds continue to remain dependent on their parents for at least a month 26 Once the birds begin to forage on their own they move away from their parents territory young birds have been found nearly 500 km away from their nest site 63 52 One year old European birds migrate to Africa and stay there for at least one year A vulture that fledged in France stayed in Africa for three years before migrating north in spring 38 37 After migrating back to their breeding areas young birds move widely in search of good feeding territories and mates The full adult plumage is attained in the fourth or fifth year Egyptian vultures have been known to live for up to 37 years in captivity and at least 21 years in the wild The probability of survival in the wild varies with age increasing till the age of 2 and then falling at the age of 5 Older birds have an annual survival probability varying from 0 75 for non breeders to 0 83 for breeding birds 64 nbsp 18 days old chick Tool use edit nbsp Egyptian vulture using a stone to crack a large egg The nominate population especially in Africa is known for its use of stones as tools When a large egg such as that of an ostrich or bustard is located the bird walks up to it with a large pebble held in its bill and tosses the pebble by swinging the neck down over the egg The operation is repeated until the egg cracks from the blows 65 They prefer using rounded pebbles to jagged rocks This behaviour although believed to have been first reported by Jane Goodall in 1966 was actually already known to Africans and was first reported by J G Wood in 1877 66 67 However this has only been reported in Africa and has not been recorded in N p ginginianus 13 Tests with both hand reared and wild birds suggest that the behaviour is innate not learnt by observing other birds and elicited once they associate eggs with food and have access to pebbles 68 Their ability to deal with ostrich eggs is utilized by brown necked ravens which form groups that wait for the eggs to be broken before collectively mobbing the vultures and engaging in kleptoparasitism 69 Another case of tool use described from Bulgaria involves the use of a twig as a tool to roll up and gather strands of wool to use for lining the nest 70 Threats and conservation edit nbsp Migratory and resident vultures at an urban garbage dump site in northwestern IndiaHealthy adults do not have many predators but human activities pose many threats Collisions with power lines hunting intentional poisoning lead accumulation from ingesting gunshot in carcasses and pesticide accumulation take a toll on populations Young birds at the nest are sometimes taken by golden eagles eagle owls 71 and red foxes 72 Only rarely do adult birds attempt to drive away predators 73 Young birds that fall off of cliff ledges may be preyed on by mammalian predators such as jackals foxes and wolves 74 Like all birds they serve as hosts for ectoparasitic birdlice including Aegypoecus perspicuus 75 as well as organisms that live within them such as mycoplasmas 76 Egyptian vulture populations have declined in most parts of its range In Europe and most of the Middle East populations in 2001 were half of those from 1980 In India the decline has been rapid with a 35 decrease each year since 1999 77 In 1967 70 the area around Delhi was estimated to have 12 000 15 000 of these vultures with an average density of about 5 pairs per 10 km2 78 79 The exact cause of the decline is not known but has been linked with the use of the NSAID Diclofenac which has been known to cause death in Gyps vultures 77 nbsp The sacred pair at Thirukalukundram in 1906In Italy the number of breeding pairs declined from 30 in 1970 to 9 in the 1990s Nearly all breeding failures were due to human activities 80 In Spain which holds about 50 of the European population suggested causes of decline include poisoning by accumulation of lead 81 pesticides especially due to large scale use in the control of Schistocerca gregaria locust swarms and electrocution 24 82 83 Windfarms may also pose a threat 84 46 Poorly designed power transmission lines in east Africa electrocute many wintering vultures 85 A shortage of carrion resulting from new rules for disposal of dead animals following the outbreak of Bovine Spongiform Encephalitis in parts of Europe during 2000 may have also had an effect on some populations 86 46 In Armenia direct persecution for trophy and for local illegal trade of animals as pets has been recorded 31 The population of Egyptian vultures in the Canary Islands has been isolated from those in Europe and Africa for a significant period of time leading to genetic differentiation The vulture population there declined by 30 in the ten years between 1987 and 1998 87 The Canarian Egyptian vulture was historically common occurring on the islands of La Gomera Tenerife Gran Canaria Fuerteventura and Lanzarote It is now restricted to Fuerteventura and Lanzarote the two easternmost islands The total population in 2000 was estimated at 130 individuals including 25 30 breeding pairs 24 88 Island birds also appear to accumulate significant amounts of lead from scavenging on hunted animal carcasses The long term effect of this poison at a sub lethal level is not known though it is known to alter the mineralization of their bones 89 In order to provide safe and uncontaminated food for nesting birds attempts have been made to create vulture restaurants where carcasses are made available However these interventions may also encourage other opportunist predators and scavengers to concentrate at the site and pose a threat to vultures nesting in the vicinity 90 In culture editEgyptian Vulturein hieroglyphsThe Bible makes a reference to the Egyptian vulture under the Hebrew name of rachamah racham which has been translated into English as gier eagle 21 91 In Ancient Egypt several hieroglyphs include the Egyptian vulture including what is listed as G1 in the Gardiner s sign list U 1313F 𓄿 92 The bird was held sacred to Isis and Mut in ancient Egyptian religion The use of the vulture as a symbol of royalty in Egyptian culture and their protection by Pharaonic law made the species common on the streets of Egypt and gave rise to the name pharaoh s chicken 93 94 95 96 The habit of coprophagy in Egyptian vultures gives them the Spanish names of churretero and moniguero which mean dung eater 48 British sportsmen in colonial India considered them to be among the ugliest birds and their habit of feeding on faeces was particularly despised 97 In British India they were known as shawks a contraction 98 of shit hawk 99 A southern Indian temple at Thirukalukundram near Chengalpattu was famed for a pair of birds that reputedly visited the temple for centuries These birds were ceremonially fed by the temple priests and arrived before noon to feed on offerings made from rice wheat ghee and sugar Although normally punctual the failure of the birds to turn up was attributed to the presence of sinners among the onlookers 28 100 101 Legend has it the vultures or eagles represented eight sages who were punished by Shiva with two of them leaving in each of a series of epochs 102 103 104 Footnotes edit BirdLife International 2019 Neophron percnopterus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T22695180A154895845 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T22695180A154895845 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 Gill F D Donsker amp P Rasmussen Eds 2020 IOC World Bird List v10 2 doi 10 14344 IOC ML 10 2 Linnaeus 1758 p 87 Savigny Jules Cesar Savigny 1809 Systeme des oiseaux de l Egypte et de la Syrie Description de l Egypte Tome 1 Vol 1 p 68 Feduccia 1974 Hertel 1995 Sanchez Marco Antonio 2022 Two new Gypaetinae Accipitridae Aves from the late Miocene of Spain Historical Biology 34 8 1534 1543 doi 10 1080 08912963 2022 2053117 S2CID 247605500 Wink Heidrich amp Fentzloff 1996 Wink 1995 Seibold amp Helbig 1995 a b Donazar et al 2002b Peters 1979 p 304 a b c d e f g h Rasmussen amp Anderton 2005 Jardine amp Selby 1826 Latham 1787 p 7 Kretzmann et al 2003 Agudo et al 2010 Hartert 1920 Zarudny amp Harms 1902 Grimal 1996 a b Koenig 1907 Thompson 1895 p 146 a b c Clark amp Schmitt 1998 a b c d e Donazar et al 2002a van Overveld de la Riva amp Donazar 2017 a b c d e f g h i Ferguson Lees amp Christie 2001 Whistler 1922 a b c d e f g h i j Ali amp Ripley 1978 Zuberogoitia I Zabala J Martinez J A Martinez J E amp Azkona A 2008 Effect of human activities on Egyptian vulture breeding success Animal Conservation 11 4 313 320 a b Dunning John B Jr ed 2008 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 a b Egyptian Vulture in Armenia Armenian Bird Census Council 2017 Archived from the original on 2017 03 28 Retrieved 2017 03 27 Mundy 1978 Yosef amp Alon 1997 Spaar 1997 Rather rare Egyptian vulture lands in Malta 3 September 2019 Archived from the original on 2019 09 04 Retrieved 2019 09 04 Agostini et al 2004 a b Garcia Ripolles Lopez Lopez amp Urios 2010 a b c Meyburg et al 2004 Capture of an Egyptian vulture Chelmsford Chronicle 16 October 1868 p 3 Retrieved 15 April 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Isles of Scilly Egyptian vulture seen in UK for first time in 150 years BBC 15 June 2021 Archived from the original on 15 June 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Egyptian vulture spotted in Ireland for the first time BBC News 2021 07 17 Archived from the original on 2021 07 21 Retrieved 2021 07 23 Sandgren B 1978 Smutsgam Neophron percnopterus antraffad i Sverige PDF Var Fagelvarld 37 67 68 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 23 Retrieved 2016 04 15 Whistler 1949 Prakash amp Nanjappa 1988 a b van Overveld et al 2021 a b c Margalida et al 2012 Tauler Ametller H Hernandez Matias A Pretus J L L Real J 2017 Landfills determine the distribution of an expanding breeding population of the endangered Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus Ibis 159 4 757 768 doi 10 1111 ibi 12495 a b Negro et al 2002 a b Baker 1928 Amezian M El Khamlichi K 2016 Significant population of Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus found in Morocco Ostrich 87 1 73 76 doi 10 2989 00306525 2015 1089334 S2CID 85701482 Donazar Ceballos amp Tella 1996 a b Ceballos amp Donazar 1990 Margalida amp Boudet 2003 Ceballos amp Donazar 1989 Biddulph 1937 Paynter 1924 Gangoso 2005 Donazar Ceballos amp Tella 1994 Tella 1993 Donazar amp Ceballos 1989a Donazar amp Ceballos 1990 Donazar amp Ceballos 1989b Elorriaga et al 2009 Grande et al 2009 van Lawick Goodall amp van Lawick 1966 Wood J G 1875 Wood s Bible Animals William Garretson amp Co p 343 Baxter Urban amp Brown 1969 Thouless Fanshawe amp Bertram 1989 Yosef Kabesa amp Yosef 2011 Stoyanova Stefanov amp Schmutz 2010 Tella amp Manosa 1993 Donazar amp Ceballos 1988 Mateo amp Olea 2007 Stoyanova amp Stefanov 1993 Agarwal et al 2012 Suarez Perez et al 2012 a b Cuthbert et al 2006 Galushin 2001 Galushin 1975 Liberatori amp Penteriani 2001 Cortes Avizanda Ceballos amp Donazar 2009 Hernandez amp Margalida 2009 Garcia Ripolles amp Lopez Lopez 2006 Carrete et al 2009 Angelov Hashim amp Oppel 2012 Hidalgo et al 2005 Palacios 2000 Palacios 2004 Gangoso et al 2009a Cortes Avizanda et al 2009 Coultas 1876 p 138 Quirke S G J 2017 The writing of the Birds Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs Before and After the Founding of Alexandria Electryone 5 1 32 43 Ingerson 1923 p 34 Thompson 1895 p 48 Stratton Porter 1909 p 182 Anonymous 1854 p 80 Dewar 1906 Partridge Eric 2003 The Routledge Dictionary of Historical Slang Routledge p 4709 Dewar Douglas 1915 Birds of the Indian Hills London John Lane The Bodley Head p 222 Neelakantan 1977 Siromoney 1977 Pope 1900 p 260 Thurston 1906 p 252 Mudaliyar M M Kumarasami 1923 Tirukalukunram Pakshi Tirtham The Diocesan Press pp 14 16 Cited works Agarwal G P Ahmad Aftab Arya Gaurav Saxena Renu Nisar Arjumand Saxena A K 2012 Chaetotaxy of three nymphal instars of an ischnoceran louse Aegypoecus perspicuus Phthiraptera Insecta Journal of Applied and Natural Science 4 1 92 95 doi 10 31018 jans v4i1 230 Agostini Nicolantonio Premuda Guido Mellone Ugo Panuccio Michele Logozzo Daniela Bassi Enrico Cocchi Leonardo 2004 Crossing the sea en route to Africa Autumn migration of some Accipitriformes over two Central Mediterranean islands PDF The Ring 26 2 71 78 doi 10 2478 v10050 008 0062 6 S2CID 42858694 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 26 Retrieved 2011 07 03 Agudo Rosa Rico Ciro Vila Carles Hiraldo Fernando Donazar Jose 2010 The role of humans in the diversification of a threatened island raptor BMC Evolutionary Biology 10 384 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 10 384 PMC 3009672 PMID 21144015 Ali Salim Ripley Sidney Dillon 1978 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predation of ground nesting birds a caveat regarding the conservation value of vulture restaurants PDF Animal Conservation 12 85 88 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1795 2008 00231 x hdl 10261 35439 S2CID 83667940 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 09 24 Cortes Avizanda Ainara Ceballos Olga Donazar Jose A 2009 Long Term Trends in Population Size and Breeding Success in the Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus in Northern Spain PDF Journal of Raptor Research 43 1 43 49 doi 10 3356 JRR 08 24 1 hdl 10261 35441 S2CID 85787233 Coultas Harland 1876 Zoology of the Bible London Wesleyan Conference Office Cuthbert R Green R E Ranade S Saravanan S Pain D J Prakash V Cunningham A A 2006 Rapid population declines of Egyptian vulture Neophron percnopterus and red headed vulture Sarcogyps calvus in India Animal Conservation 9 3 349 354 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1795 2006 00041 x S2CID 52065487 Dewar Douglas 1906 Bombay Ducks John Lane London p 277 Donazar Jose Antonio Ceballos Olga 1989 Growth rates of nestling 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Ibis 131 9 15 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1989 tb02737 x Thurston E W 1906 Ethnographic notes in southern India Madras Government Press van Lawick Goodall Jane van Lawick Hugo 1966 Use of Tools by the Egyptian Vulture Neophron percnopterus Nature 212 5069 1468 1469 Bibcode 1966Natur 212 1468V doi 10 1038 2121468a0 S2CID 4204223 van Overveld T de la Riva M Donazar J A 2017 Cosmetic coloration in Egyptian vultures Mud bathing as a tool for social communication Ecology 98 8 2216 2218 doi 10 1002 ecy 1840 hdl 11000 6006 PMID 28481410 van Overveld Thijs Sol Daniel Blanco Guillermo Margalida Antoni de la Riva Manuel Donazar Jose Antonio 2021 Vultures as an overlooked model in cognitive ecology Animal Cognition 25 3 495 507 doi 10 1007 s10071 021 01585 2 ISSN 1435 9448 PMID 34817739 S2CID 244528546 Whistler Hugh 1949 Popular Handbook of Indian Birds 4th ed London Gurney amp Jackson pp 356 357 ISBN 978 1 4067 4576 4 Whistler Hugh 1922 The birds of Jhang district S W Punjab Part II Non Passerine birds Ibis 64 3 401 437 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1922 tb01326 x Wink Michael 1995 Phylogeny of Old and New World Vultures Aves Accipitridae and Cathartidae Inferred from Nucleotide Sequences of the Mitochondrial Cytochrome b Gene PDF Zeitschrift fur Naturforschung C 50 11 12 868 882 doi 10 1515 znc 1995 11 1220 PMID 8561830 S2CID 1388021 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 16 Retrieved 2010 08 09 Wink Michael Heidrich Petra Fentzloff Claus 1996 A mtDNA phylogeny of sea eagles genus Haliaeetus based on nucleotide sequences of the cytochrome b gene PDF Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 24 7 8 783 791 doi 10 1016 S0305 1978 96 00049 X Yosef Reuven Alon Dan 1997 Do immature Palearctic Egyptian Vultures Neophron percnopterus remain in Africa during the northern summer Vogelwelt 118 285 289 Yosef Reuven Kabesa Shai Yosef Nufar 2011 Set a thief to catch a thief brown necked raven Corvus ruficollis cooperatively kleptoparasitize Egyptian vulture Neophron percnopterus Naturwissenschaften 98 5 443 446 Bibcode 2011NW 98 443Y doi 10 1007 s00114 011 0777 0 ISSN 0028 1042 PMID 21409436 S2CID 6532659 Zarudny V Harms M 1902 Neue Vogelarten Ornithologische Monatsberichte in German 4 49 55 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neophron percnopterus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Neophron percnopterus BTO BirdFacts Egyptian Vulture Egyptian Vulture species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds Egyptian Vulture Global Raptor Information Network Ageing and sexing PDF 5 6 MB by Javier Blasco Zumeta amp Gerd Michael Heinze Egyptian vulture media Internet Bird Collection Egyptian vulture photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Armenian Bird Census Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Egyptian vulture amp oldid 1188032903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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