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Turkey vulture

The turkey vulture (Cathartes aura) is the most widespread of the New World vultures.[2] One of three species in the genus Cathartes of the family Cathartidae, the turkey vulture ranges from southern Canada to the southernmost tip of South America. It inhabits a variety of open and semi-open areas, including subtropical forests, shrublands, pastures, and deserts.[1]

Turkey vulture
Temporal range: Pleistocene–present
A turkey vulture in Orange Walk District, Belize
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Cathartiformes
Family: Cathartidae
Genus: Cathartes
Species:
C. aura
Binomial name
Cathartes aura
Range of C. aura[image reference needed]
  Summer only range
  Year-round range
Synonyms

Vultur aura Linnaeus, 1758

Like all New World vultures, it is not closely related to the Old World vultures of Europe, Africa, and Asia. However, the two groups strongly resemble each other due to convergent evolution.

The turkey vulture is a scavenger and feeds almost exclusively on carrion.[3] It finds its food using its keen eyes and sense of smell, flying low enough to detect the gasses produced by the beginnings of the process of decay in dead animals.[3] In flight, it uses thermals to move through the air, flapping its wings infrequently. It roosts in large community groups. Lacking a syrinx—the vocal organ of birds—its only vocalizations are grunts or low hisses.[4] It nests in caves, hollow trees, or thickets. Each year it generally raises two chicks, which it feeds by regurgitation.[5] It has very few natural predators.[6] In the United States, the vulture receives legal protection under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.[7]

Names edit

It is also known in some North American regions as a "buzzard" or "turkey buzzard" and in some areas of the Caribbean as the "John crow" or "carrion crow."[8]

Taxonomy edit

 
In flight over Cuba

The turkey vulture received its common name from the resemblance of the adult's bald red head and dark plumage to that of the male wild turkey, while the name "vulture" is derived from the Latin word vulturus, meaning "tearer", and is a reference to its feeding habits.[9] The word buzzard is used by North Americans to refer to this bird, yet in the Old World that term refers to members of the genus Buteo.[10] The turkey vulture was first formally described by Carl Linnaeus as Vultur aura in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae, and characterised as "V. fuscogriseus, remigibus nigris, rostro albo" ("brown-gray vulture, with black wing flight feathers and a white beak").[11] It is a member of the family Cathartidae, along with the other six species of New World vultures, and included in the genus Cathartes, along with the greater yellow-headed vulture and the lesser yellow-headed vulture. Like other New World vultures, the turkey vulture has a diploid chromosome number of 80.[12]

The taxonomic placement of the turkey vulture and the remaining six species of New World vultures has been in flux.[13] Though both are similar in appearance and have similar ecological roles, the New World and Old World vultures evolved from different ancestors in different parts of the world. Some earlier authorities suggested that the New World vultures were more closely related to storks.[14] More recent authorities maintained their overall position in the order Falconiformes along with the Old World vultures[15] or place them in their own order, Cathartiformes.[16]

However, recent genetic studies indicate that neither New World nor Old World vultures are close to falcons, nor are New World vultures close to storks.[17] Both are basal members of the clade Afroaves,[18] with Old World vultures comprising several groups within the family Accipitridae, also containing eagles, kites, and hawks,[19][20] while New World vultures in Cathartiformes are a sister group to Accipitriformes[18] (containing the osprey and secretarybird along with Accipitridae[20]).

There are five subspecies of turkey vulture:

Image Subspecies Description Distribution
  C. a. aura Linnaeus, 1758, the Antillean turkey vulture. The nominate subspecies. This subspecies occasionally overlaps its range with other subspecies. It is the smallest of the subspecies, but is nearly indistinguishable from C. a. meridionalis in color.[21] It is found from Mexico south through South America and the Greater Antilles.
  C. a. jota Molina, GI 1782, the Chilean turkey vulture Larger, browner, and slightly paler than C. a. ruficollis. The secondary feathers and wing coverts may have gray margins.[22] Pacific coast of Ecuador to Tierra del Fuego and Falkland Islands.
  C. a. meridionalis Swann, 1921, the western turkey vulture, is a synonym for C. a. teter. C. a. teter was identified as a subspecies by Friedman in 1933, but in 1964 Alexander Wetmore separated the western birds, which took the name meridionalis, which was applied earlier to a migrant from South America. It breeds from southern Manitoba, southern British Columbia, central Alberta and Saskatchewan south to Baja California, south-central Arizona, southeastern New Mexico, and south-central Texas.[23] It is the most migratory subspecies, migrating as far as South America, where it overlaps the range of the smaller C. a. aura. It differs from the eastern turkey vulture in color, as the edges of the lesser wing coverts are darker brown and narrower.[21]
  C. a. ruficollis Spix, 1824, the tropical turkey vulture It is darker and more black than C. a. aura, with brown wing edgings which are narrower or absent altogether.[24] The head and neck are dull red with yellow-white or green-white markings. Adults generally have a pale yellow patch on the crown of the head.[22] Found in Panama south through Uruguay and Argentina. It is also found on the island of Trinidad.[24]
  C. a. septentrionalis Wied-Neuwied, 1839 is known as the eastern turkey vulture The eastern and western turkey vultures differ in tail and wing proportions. It is less migratory than C. a. meridionalis and rarely migrates to areas south of the United States.[21] It ranges from southeastern Canada south through the eastern United States.

Description edit

 
Skull of a turkey vulture

A large bird, it has a wingspan of 160–183 cm (63–72 in), a length of 62–81 cm (24–32 in), and weight of 0.8 to 2.41 kg (1.8 to 5.3 lb).[25][26][27][28] Birds in the northern limit of the species' range average larger in size than the vulture from the neotropics. 124 birds from Florida averaged 2 kg (4.4 lb) while 65 and 130 birds from Venezuela were found to average 1.22 and 1.45 kg (2.7 and 3.2 lb), respectively.[29][30][31] It displays minimal sexual dimorphism; sexes are identical in plumage and in coloration, and are similar in size.[32] The body feathers are mostly brownish-black, but the flight feathers on the wings appear to be silvery-gray beneath, contrasting with the darker wing linings.[25] The adult's head is small in proportion to its body and is red in color with few to no feathers. It also has a relatively short, hooked, ivory-colored beak.[33] The irises of the eyes are gray-brown; legs and feet are pink-skinned, although typically stained white. The eye has a single incomplete row of eyelashes on the upper lid and two rows on the lower lid.[34]

 
An eastern turkey vulture (C. a. septentrionalis) in flight (Canada)

The two front toes of the foot are long and have small webs at their bases.[35] Tracks are large, between 9.5 and 14 cm (3.7 and 5.5 in) in length and 8.2 and 10.2 cm (3.2 and 4.0 in) in width, both measurements including claw marks. Toes are arranged in the classic, anisodactyl pattern.[36] The feet are flat, relatively weak, and poorly adapted to grasping; the talons are also not designed for grasping, as they are relatively blunt.[2] In flight, the tail is long and slim. The black vulture is relatively shorter-tailed and shorter-winged, which makes it appear rather smaller in flight than the turkey vulture, although the body masses of the two species are roughly the same. The nostrils are not divided by a septum, but rather are perforate; from the side one can see through the beak.[37] It undergoes a molt in late winter to early spring. It is a gradual molt, which lasts until early autumn.[5] The immature bird has a gray head with a black beak tip; the colors change to those of the adult as the bird matures.[38]

Captive longevity is not well known. As of 2022, there is one captive bird over 48 years old: a male named Lord Richard that lives at the Lindsay Wildlife Experience in Walnut Creek, California. Lord Richard hatched in 1974 at Randall Museum in San Francisco and arrived at Lindsay Wildlife later that year.[39] Another turkey vulture named Nero lived to the age of 47. Nero also hatched in 1974 and was taken from his nest for research studies at the University of Wisconsin. He later became an education ambassador at Carpenter Nature Center in Hastings, Minnesota, and in 1993 he joined the education department of the University of Minnesota's Raptor Center. He remained their only educational vulture until his death in 2022.[40]

The oldest wild captured banded bird was 16 years old.[3]

Leucistic (sometimes mistakenly called "albino") turkey vultures are sometimes seen.[41][42]

Like most other vultures, the turkey vulture has very few vocalization capabilities. Because it lacks a syrinx, it can only utter hisses and grunts.[4]

Distribution and habitat edit

The turkey vulture has a large range, with an estimated global occurrence of 28,000,000 km2 (11,000,000 sq mi). It is the most widely distributed vulture in the Americas and rivals its cousin the black vulture as the most abundant raptorial bird worldwide.[2] Its global population is estimated to be 18,000,000 individuals.[1][43] It is found in open and semi-open areas throughout the Americas from southern Canada to Cape Horn. It is a permanent resident in the southern United States, though northern birds may migrate as far south as South America.[3] The turkey vulture is widespread over nearly all American habitats but they tend to show particular habitat preferences.[41] It is most commonly found in relatively open areas which juxtapose with woodland, which are important both for nesting and roosting. Furthermore, turkey vultures in North America generally avoid enclosed forested areas that may hamper their ability to take flight and tend to often favor hill or low mountainous areas that make catching flight easier with less effort.[25][44] This species can be seen over open country, including grasslands but are often absent from completely treeless areas such as some parts of the prairies or Great Plains.[41][45] Additionally, they may adapt to tropical and subtropical forests, shrublands, deserts and semi-desert, wetlands and foothills.[1][41][46] Evidence indicates agricultural land is key habitat for turkey vultures, mainly pastureland or other low-input farmland for foraging and roosting but they tend to only occur ephemerally as flyovers around row-crop type agriculture.[47][48][49] Other manmade habitats can be used, with the species regularly seen over urban areas throughout its range, though they tend to use them more when not breeding, being unable to nest without appropriate habitats, and do not occur as an urban bird nearly as routinely as do black vultures in the tropics and subtropics.[50][51]

This bird with its crow-like aspect gave foot to the naming of the Quebrada de los Cuervos (Crows Ravine) in Uruguay, where they dwell together with the lesser yellow-headed vulture and the black vulture.[52]

Ecology and behavior edit

 
Adult bird in horaltic pose

The turkey vulture is gregarious and roosts in large community groups, breaking away to forage independently during the day. Several hundred vultures may roost communally in groups, which sometimes even include black vultures. It roosts often on dead, leafless trees as well as low-density conifers, and will also roost on man-made structures such as water or microwave towers. Though it nests in caves, it does not enter them except during the breeding season.[5] The turkey vulture lowers its night-time body temperature by about 6 degrees Celsius to 34 °C (93 °F), becoming slightly hypothermic.[35]

 
Turkey vulture flying in the Everglades

This vulture is often seen standing in a spread-winged or horaltic stance. The stance is believed to serve multiple functions: drying the wings, warming the body, and baking off bacteria. It is practiced more often following damp or rainy nights. This same behavior is displayed by other New World vultures, by Old World vultures, and by storks.[6] Like storks, the turkey vulture often defecates on its own legs, using the evaporation of the water in the feces and/or urine to cool itself, a process known as urohidrosis.[53] It cools the blood vessels in the unfeathered tarsi and feet, and causes white uric acid to streak the legs.[54] The turkey vulture has few natural predators and the few recorded predators appear to take them quite infrequently. Fledging, immature and adult vultures, in descending likelihood of predation, may fall prey to great horned owls, golden eagles, bald eagles and potentially red-tailed hawks, while eggs and nestlings may be preyed on by mammals such as raccoons and opossums.[6][26][55][56][57] Foxes can occasionally ambush an adult but species that can climb are more likely to breach and predate nests than adults, while dogs may sometimes rarely kill a turkey vulture as well.[58] Its primary form of defense is regurgitating semi-digested meat, a foul-smelling substance, which deters most creatures intent on raiding a vulture nest.[5] It will also sting if the predator is close enough to get the vomit in its face or eyes. In some cases, the vulture must rid its crop of a heavy, undigested meal to take flight to flee from a potential predator.[33] Its life expectancy in the wild ranges upward of 16 years, with a captive life span of over 45 years being possible.[59][60][61]

The turkey vulture is awkward on the ground with an ungainly, hopping walk. It requires a great deal of effort to take flight, flapping its wings while pushing off the ground and hopping with its feet.[33] While soaring, the turkey vulture holds its wings in a shallow V-shape and often tips from side to side, frequently causing the gray flight feathers to appear silvery as they catch the light. The flight of the turkey vulture is an example of static soaring flight, in which it flaps its wings very infrequently, and takes advantage of rising thermals to stay soaring.[62]

Breeding edit

The breeding season of the turkey vulture varies according to latitude.[63] In the southern United States, it commences in March, peaks in April to May, and continues into June.[64] In more northerly latitudes, the season starts later and extends into August.[65] Courtship rituals of the turkey vulture involve several individuals gathering in a circle, where they perform hopping movements around the perimeter of the circle with wings partially spread. In the air, one bird closely follows another while flapping and diving.[46]

 
One chick immediately hatched and one egg not yet hatched

Eggs are generally laid in the nesting site in a protected location such as a cliff, a cave, a rock crevice, a burrow, inside a hollow tree, or in a thicket. There is little or no construction of a nest; eggs are laid on a bare surface. Females generally lay two eggs, but sometimes one and rarely three. The eggs are cream-colored, with brown or lavender spots around their larger end.[46] Both parents incubate, and the young hatch after 30 to 40 days. Chicks are altricial, or helpless at birth. Both adults feed the chicks by regurgitating food for them, and care for them for 10 to 11 weeks. When adults are threatened while nesting, they may flee, or they may regurgitate on the intruder or feign death.[5] If the chicks are threatened in the nest, they defend themselves by hissing and regurgitating.[46] The young fledge at about nine to ten weeks. Family groups remain together until fall.[46]

Feeding edit

 
Feeding on a dead gull at Morro Bay, California

The turkey vulture feeds primarily on a wide variety of carrion, from small mammals (such as mice and shrews) to large grazers (such as ungulates), preferring those recently dead, and avoiding carcasses that have reached the point of putrefaction.[66] They may rarely feed on plant matter, shoreline vegetation, pumpkin, grape, juniper, coconut and other crops, live frogs, live insects and other invertebrates.[46][67][66] In South America, turkey vultures have been photographed feeding on the fruits of the introduced oil palm.[68][69][70] They rarely, if ever, kill prey themselves; when they do it tends to comprise small weak offspring or very sick individuals of various animals, such as bird eggs and nestlings, as well as reptiles.[71][72][73][74] Turkey vultures have also been observed eating coyote, sea lion and domestic animal dung.[66] The turkey vulture can often be seen along roadsides feeding on roadkill, or near bodies of water, feeding on washed-up fish.[3] They also will feed on fish, tadpoles or insects that have become stranded in shallow water.[5][66] It sometimes comes to rubbish dumps, but in general, is a rather different kind of scavenger from the black vulture.[74] Like other vultures, it plays an important role in the ecosystem by disposing of carrion, which would otherwise be a breeding ground for disease.[75]

 
A turkey vulture eating a garter snake

The turkey vulture forages by smell, an ability that is uncommon in the avian world, often flying low to the ground to pick up the scent of ethyl mercaptan, a gas produced by the beginnings of decay in dead animals.[6] The olfactory lobe of its brain, responsible for processing smells, is particularly large compared to that of other animals.[6] This heightened ability to detect odors allows it to search for carrion below the forest canopy. King vultures, black vultures, and condors, which lack the ability to smell carrion, follow the turkey vulture to carcasses. The turkey vulture arrives first at the carcass, or with greater yellow-headed vultures or lesser yellow-headed vultures, which also share the ability to smell carrion.[6] It displaces the yellow-headed vultures from carcasses due to its larger size,[75] but is displaced in turn by the king vulture and both types of condor, which make the first cut into the skin of the dead animal. This allows the smaller, weaker-billed turkey vulture access to food, because it cannot tear the tough hides of larger animals on its own. This is an example of mutual dependence between species.[76] Black vultures tend to be more aggressive and often displace turkey vultures which appear to be intimidated especially by the feeding frenzy engaged in by the black vultures when they come in numbers (a behavior turkey vultures are apparently incapable of even when at a carcass in numbers), however pairs or individuals often seem to be able to peaceably share carrion with turkey vultures.[77][78] However, in the tropics such as Peru, turkey vultures appeared to prevail regularly over black vultures, in 56% of cases, perhaps due to the smaller size of the region's black vultures.[79] It is further subservient to large hawks such as red-tailed hawks, Harris's hawks and Buteogallus black hawks, as well as to large falcons like peregrine falcons and crested caracaras, despite most of these birds being rather smaller in body size than a turkey vulture. Often these raptors tend to engage in dive-bombing or other intimidation displays towards the vulture(s) to displace them from carrion or from perch sites. Presumably all sympatric eagles are also dominant, with bald eagles confirmed to easily dominate turkey vultures in Florida.[41][79][80][81] However, in the tropics Swainson's hawks and yellow-headed caracara (as well as lesser yellow-headed vultures) appear to be subservient to turkey vultures.[41][82] Furthermore, turkey vultures are dominant over crows at carrion, but not over common ravens.[83]

Relationship with humans edit

 
A side view, showing the perforated nostrils

The turkey vulture is sometimes accused of carrying anthrax or hog cholera, both livestock diseases, on its feet or bill by cattle ranchers and is therefore occasionally perceived as a threat.[41] However, the virus that causes hog cholera is destroyed when it passes through the turkey vulture's digestive tract.[33] This species also may be perceived as a threat by farmers due to the similar black vulture's tendency to attack and kill newborn cattle. The turkey vulture does not kill live animals but will mix with flocks of black vultures and will scavenge what they leave behind. Nonetheless, its appearance at a location where a calf has been killed gives the incorrect impression that the turkey vulture represents a danger to calves.[84] The droppings produced by turkey vultures and other vultures can harm or kill trees and other vegetation.[85] The turkey vulture can be held in captivity, though the Migratory Bird Treaty Act prevents this in the case of uninjured animals or animals capable of returning to the wild.[86] In captivity, it can be fed fresh meat, and younger birds will gorge themselves if given the opportunity.[33]

The turkey vulture species receives special legal protections under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 in the United States,[7] by the Convention for the Protection of Migratory Birds in Canada,[87] and by the Convention for the Protection of Migratory Birds and Game Mammals in Mexico.[87] In the US it is illegal to take, kill, or possess turkey vultures, their eggs, and any body parts including but not limited to their feathers; violation of the law is punishable by a fine of up to $100,000 for individuals or $200,000 for organizations, and/or a prison term of 1 year.[86] It is listed as a species of least concern by the IUCN Red List. Populations appear to remain stable, and it has not reached the threshold of inclusion as a threatened species, which requires a decline of more than 30 percent in 10 years or three generations.[1]

References edit

Notes edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Ffrench, R. Birds of Trinidad and Tobago. ISBN 0-7136-6759-1
  • Stiles and Skutch. A guide to the birds of Costa Rica. ISBN 0-8014-9600-4
  • Kirk, D. A. and M. J. Mossman. 1998. "Turkey Vulture (Cathartes aura)". In The Birds of North America, No. 339 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA.

External links edit

  • on eNature.com
  • "Turkey vulture media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Uncommon light morph turkey vulture photo
  • Turkey vulture photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Live Streaming of a Vulture Feeding Station at Selu Conservancy, Radford, Virginia.

turkey, vulture, turkey, vulture, cathartes, aura, most, widespread, world, vultures, three, species, genus, cathartes, family, cathartidae, turkey, vulture, ranges, from, southern, canada, southernmost, south, america, inhabits, variety, open, semi, open, are. The turkey vulture Cathartes aura is the most widespread of the New World vultures 2 One of three species in the genus Cathartes of the family Cathartidae the turkey vulture ranges from southern Canada to the southernmost tip of South America It inhabits a variety of open and semi open areas including subtropical forests shrublands pastures and deserts 1 Turkey vultureTemporal range Pleistocene present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N A turkey vulture in Orange Walk District BelizeConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder CathartiformesFamily CathartidaeGenus CathartesSpecies C auraBinomial nameCathartes aura Linnaeus 1758 Range of C aura image reference needed Summer only range Year round rangeSynonymsVultur aura Linnaeus 1758Like all New World vultures it is not closely related to the Old World vultures of Europe Africa and Asia However the two groups strongly resemble each other due to convergent evolution The turkey vulture is a scavenger and feeds almost exclusively on carrion 3 It finds its food using its keen eyes and sense of smell flying low enough to detect the gasses produced by the beginnings of the process of decay in dead animals 3 In flight it uses thermals to move through the air flapping its wings infrequently It roosts in large community groups Lacking a syrinx the vocal organ of birds its only vocalizations are grunts or low hisses 4 It nests in caves hollow trees or thickets Each year it generally raises two chicks which it feeds by regurgitation 5 It has very few natural predators 6 In the United States the vulture receives legal protection under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 7 Contents 1 Names 2 Taxonomy 3 Description 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Ecology and behavior 5 1 Breeding 5 2 Feeding 6 Relationship with humans 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksNames editIt is also known in some North American regions as a buzzard or turkey buzzard and in some areas of the Caribbean as the John crow or carrion crow 8 Taxonomy edit nbsp In flight over CubaThe turkey vulture received its common name from the resemblance of the adult s bald red head and dark plumage to that of the male wild turkey while the name vulture is derived from the Latin word vulturus meaning tearer and is a reference to its feeding habits 9 The word buzzard is used by North Americans to refer to this bird yet in the Old World that term refers to members of the genus Buteo 10 The turkey vulture was first formally described by Carl Linnaeus as Vultur aura in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae and characterised as V fuscogriseus remigibus nigris rostro albo brown gray vulture with black wing flight feathers and a white beak 11 It is a member of the family Cathartidae along with the other six species of New World vultures and included in the genus Cathartes along with the greater yellow headed vulture and the lesser yellow headed vulture Like other New World vultures the turkey vulture has a diploid chromosome number of 80 12 The taxonomic placement of the turkey vulture and the remaining six species of New World vultures has been in flux 13 Though both are similar in appearance and have similar ecological roles the New World and Old World vultures evolved from different ancestors in different parts of the world Some earlier authorities suggested that the New World vultures were more closely related to storks 14 More recent authorities maintained their overall position in the order Falconiformes along with the Old World vultures 15 or place them in their own order Cathartiformes 16 However recent genetic studies indicate that neither New World nor Old World vultures are close to falcons nor are New World vultures close to storks 17 Both are basal members of the clade Afroaves 18 with Old World vultures comprising several groups within the family Accipitridae also containing eagles kites and hawks 19 20 while New World vultures in Cathartiformes are a sister group to Accipitriformes 18 containing the osprey and secretarybird along with Accipitridae 20 There are five subspecies of turkey vulture Image Subspecies Description Distribution nbsp C a aura Linnaeus 1758 the Antillean turkey vulture The nominate subspecies This subspecies occasionally overlaps its range with other subspecies It is the smallest of the subspecies but is nearly indistinguishable from C a meridionalis in color 21 It is found from Mexico south through South America and the Greater Antilles nbsp C a jota Molina GI 1782 the Chilean turkey vulture Larger browner and slightly paler than C a ruficollis The secondary feathers and wing coverts may have gray margins 22 Pacific coast of Ecuador to Tierra del Fuego and Falkland Islands nbsp C a meridionalis Swann 1921 the western turkey vulture is a synonym for C a teter C a teter was identified as a subspecies by Friedman in 1933 but in 1964 Alexander Wetmore separated the western birds which took the name meridionalis which was applied earlier to a migrant from South America It breeds from southern Manitoba southern British Columbia central Alberta and Saskatchewan south to Baja California south central Arizona southeastern New Mexico and south central Texas 23 It is the most migratory subspecies migrating as far as South America where it overlaps the range of the smaller C a aura It differs from the eastern turkey vulture in color as the edges of the lesser wing coverts are darker brown and narrower 21 nbsp C a ruficollis Spix 1824 the tropical turkey vulture It is darker and more black than C a aura with brown wing edgings which are narrower or absent altogether 24 The head and neck are dull red with yellow white or green white markings Adults generally have a pale yellow patch on the crown of the head 22 Found in Panama south through Uruguay and Argentina It is also found on the island of Trinidad 24 nbsp C a septentrionalis Wied Neuwied 1839 is known as the eastern turkey vulture The eastern and western turkey vultures differ in tail and wing proportions It is less migratory than C a meridionalis and rarely migrates to areas south of the United States 21 It ranges from southeastern Canada south through the eastern United States Description edit nbsp Skull of a turkey vulture nbsp Sounds of a turkey vulture source source Problems playing this file See media help A large bird it has a wingspan of 160 183 cm 63 72 in a length of 62 81 cm 24 32 in and weight of 0 8 to 2 41 kg 1 8 to 5 3 lb 25 26 27 28 Birds in the northern limit of the species range average larger in size than the vulture from the neotropics 124 birds from Florida averaged 2 kg 4 4 lb while 65 and 130 birds from Venezuela were found to average 1 22 and 1 45 kg 2 7 and 3 2 lb respectively 29 30 31 It displays minimal sexual dimorphism sexes are identical in plumage and in coloration and are similar in size 32 The body feathers are mostly brownish black but the flight feathers on the wings appear to be silvery gray beneath contrasting with the darker wing linings 25 The adult s head is small in proportion to its body and is red in color with few to no feathers It also has a relatively short hooked ivory colored beak 33 The irises of the eyes are gray brown legs and feet are pink skinned although typically stained white The eye has a single incomplete row of eyelashes on the upper lid and two rows on the lower lid 34 nbsp An eastern turkey vulture C a septentrionalis in flight Canada The two front toes of the foot are long and have small webs at their bases 35 Tracks are large between 9 5 and 14 cm 3 7 and 5 5 in in length and 8 2 and 10 2 cm 3 2 and 4 0 in in width both measurements including claw marks Toes are arranged in the classic anisodactyl pattern 36 The feet are flat relatively weak and poorly adapted to grasping the talons are also not designed for grasping as they are relatively blunt 2 In flight the tail is long and slim The black vulture is relatively shorter tailed and shorter winged which makes it appear rather smaller in flight than the turkey vulture although the body masses of the two species are roughly the same The nostrils are not divided by a septum but rather are perforate from the side one can see through the beak 37 It undergoes a molt in late winter to early spring It is a gradual molt which lasts until early autumn 5 The immature bird has a gray head with a black beak tip the colors change to those of the adult as the bird matures 38 Captive longevity is not well known As of 2022 update there is one captive bird over 48 years old a male named Lord Richard that lives at the Lindsay Wildlife Experience in Walnut Creek California Lord Richard hatched in 1974 at Randall Museum in San Francisco and arrived at Lindsay Wildlife later that year 39 Another turkey vulture named Nero lived to the age of 47 Nero also hatched in 1974 and was taken from his nest for research studies at the University of Wisconsin He later became an education ambassador at Carpenter Nature Center in Hastings Minnesota and in 1993 he joined the education department of the University of Minnesota s Raptor Center He remained their only educational vulture until his death in 2022 40 The oldest wild captured banded bird was 16 years old 3 Leucistic sometimes mistakenly called albino turkey vultures are sometimes seen 41 42 Like most other vultures the turkey vulture has very few vocalization capabilities Because it lacks a syrinx it can only utter hisses and grunts 4 Distribution and habitat editThe turkey vulture has a large range with an estimated global occurrence of 28 000 000 km2 11 000 000 sq mi It is the most widely distributed vulture in the Americas and rivals its cousin the black vulture as the most abundant raptorial bird worldwide 2 Its global population is estimated to be 18 000 000 individuals 1 43 It is found in open and semi open areas throughout the Americas from southern Canada to Cape Horn It is a permanent resident in the southern United States though northern birds may migrate as far south as South America 3 The turkey vulture is widespread over nearly all American habitats but they tend to show particular habitat preferences 41 It is most commonly found in relatively open areas which juxtapose with woodland which are important both for nesting and roosting Furthermore turkey vultures in North America generally avoid enclosed forested areas that may hamper their ability to take flight and tend to often favor hill or low mountainous areas that make catching flight easier with less effort 25 44 This species can be seen over open country including grasslands but are often absent from completely treeless areas such as some parts of the prairies or Great Plains 41 45 Additionally they may adapt to tropical and subtropical forests shrublands deserts and semi desert wetlands and foothills 1 41 46 Evidence indicates agricultural land is key habitat for turkey vultures mainly pastureland or other low input farmland for foraging and roosting but they tend to only occur ephemerally as flyovers around row crop type agriculture 47 48 49 Other manmade habitats can be used with the species regularly seen over urban areas throughout its range though they tend to use them more when not breeding being unable to nest without appropriate habitats and do not occur as an urban bird nearly as routinely as do black vultures in the tropics and subtropics 50 51 This bird with its crow like aspect gave foot to the naming of the Quebrada de los Cuervos Crows Ravine in Uruguay where they dwell together with the lesser yellow headed vulture and the black vulture 52 Ecology and behavior edit nbsp Adult bird in horaltic poseThe turkey vulture is gregarious and roosts in large community groups breaking away to forage independently during the day Several hundred vultures may roost communally in groups which sometimes even include black vultures It roosts often on dead leafless trees as well as low density conifers and will also roost on man made structures such as water or microwave towers Though it nests in caves it does not enter them except during the breeding season 5 The turkey vulture lowers its night time body temperature by about 6 degrees Celsius to 34 C 93 F becoming slightly hypothermic 35 nbsp Turkey vulture flying in the EvergladesThis vulture is often seen standing in a spread winged or horaltic stance The stance is believed to serve multiple functions drying the wings warming the body and baking off bacteria It is practiced more often following damp or rainy nights This same behavior is displayed by other New World vultures by Old World vultures and by storks 6 Like storks the turkey vulture often defecates on its own legs using the evaporation of the water in the feces and or urine to cool itself a process known as urohidrosis 53 It cools the blood vessels in the unfeathered tarsi and feet and causes white uric acid to streak the legs 54 The turkey vulture has few natural predators and the few recorded predators appear to take them quite infrequently Fledging immature and adult vultures in descending likelihood of predation may fall prey to great horned owls golden eagles bald eagles and potentially red tailed hawks while eggs and nestlings may be preyed on by mammals such as raccoons and opossums 6 26 55 56 57 Foxes can occasionally ambush an adult but species that can climb are more likely to breach and predate nests than adults while dogs may sometimes rarely kill a turkey vulture as well 58 Its primary form of defense is regurgitating semi digested meat a foul smelling substance which deters most creatures intent on raiding a vulture nest 5 It will also sting if the predator is close enough to get the vomit in its face or eyes In some cases the vulture must rid its crop of a heavy undigested meal to take flight to flee from a potential predator 33 Its life expectancy in the wild ranges upward of 16 years with a captive life span of over 45 years being possible 59 60 61 The turkey vulture is awkward on the ground with an ungainly hopping walk It requires a great deal of effort to take flight flapping its wings while pushing off the ground and hopping with its feet 33 While soaring the turkey vulture holds its wings in a shallow V shape and often tips from side to side frequently causing the gray flight feathers to appear silvery as they catch the light The flight of the turkey vulture is an example of static soaring flight in which it flaps its wings very infrequently and takes advantage of rising thermals to stay soaring 62 Breeding edit The breeding season of the turkey vulture varies according to latitude 63 In the southern United States it commences in March peaks in April to May and continues into June 64 In more northerly latitudes the season starts later and extends into August 65 Courtship rituals of the turkey vulture involve several individuals gathering in a circle where they perform hopping movements around the perimeter of the circle with wings partially spread In the air one bird closely follows another while flapping and diving 46 nbsp One chick immediately hatched and one egg not yet hatchedEggs are generally laid in the nesting site in a protected location such as a cliff a cave a rock crevice a burrow inside a hollow tree or in a thicket There is little or no construction of a nest eggs are laid on a bare surface Females generally lay two eggs but sometimes one and rarely three The eggs are cream colored with brown or lavender spots around their larger end 46 Both parents incubate and the young hatch after 30 to 40 days Chicks are altricial or helpless at birth Both adults feed the chicks by regurgitating food for them and care for them for 10 to 11 weeks When adults are threatened while nesting they may flee or they may regurgitate on the intruder or feign death 5 If the chicks are threatened in the nest they defend themselves by hissing and regurgitating 46 The young fledge at about nine to ten weeks Family groups remain together until fall 46 Feeding edit nbsp Feeding on a dead gull at Morro Bay CaliforniaThe turkey vulture feeds primarily on a wide variety of carrion from small mammals such as mice and shrews to large grazers such as ungulates preferring those recently dead and avoiding carcasses that have reached the point of putrefaction 66 They may rarely feed on plant matter shoreline vegetation pumpkin grape juniper coconut and other crops live frogs live insects and other invertebrates 46 67 66 In South America turkey vultures have been photographed feeding on the fruits of the introduced oil palm 68 69 70 They rarely if ever kill prey themselves when they do it tends to comprise small weak offspring or very sick individuals of various animals such as bird eggs and nestlings as well as reptiles 71 72 73 74 Turkey vultures have also been observed eating coyote sea lion and domestic animal dung 66 The turkey vulture can often be seen along roadsides feeding on roadkill or near bodies of water feeding on washed up fish 3 They also will feed on fish tadpoles or insects that have become stranded in shallow water 5 66 It sometimes comes to rubbish dumps but in general is a rather different kind of scavenger from the black vulture 74 Like other vultures it plays an important role in the ecosystem by disposing of carrion which would otherwise be a breeding ground for disease 75 nbsp A turkey vulture eating a garter snakeThe turkey vulture forages by smell an ability that is uncommon in the avian world often flying low to the ground to pick up the scent of ethyl mercaptan a gas produced by the beginnings of decay in dead animals 6 The olfactory lobe of its brain responsible for processing smells is particularly large compared to that of other animals 6 This heightened ability to detect odors allows it to search for carrion below the forest canopy King vultures black vultures and condors which lack the ability to smell carrion follow the turkey vulture to carcasses The turkey vulture arrives first at the carcass or with greater yellow headed vultures or lesser yellow headed vultures which also share the ability to smell carrion 6 It displaces the yellow headed vultures from carcasses due to its larger size 75 but is displaced in turn by the king vulture and both types of condor which make the first cut into the skin of the dead animal This allows the smaller weaker billed turkey vulture access to food because it cannot tear the tough hides of larger animals on its own This is an example of mutual dependence between species 76 Black vultures tend to be more aggressive and often displace turkey vultures which appear to be intimidated especially by the feeding frenzy engaged in by the black vultures when they come in numbers a behavior turkey vultures are apparently incapable of even when at a carcass in numbers however pairs or individuals often seem to be able to peaceably share carrion with turkey vultures 77 78 However in the tropics such as Peru turkey vultures appeared to prevail regularly over black vultures in 56 of cases perhaps due to the smaller size of the region s black vultures 79 It is further subservient to large hawks such as red tailed hawks Harris s hawks and Buteogallus black hawks as well as to large falcons like peregrine falcons and crested caracaras despite most of these birds being rather smaller in body size than a turkey vulture Often these raptors tend to engage in dive bombing or other intimidation displays towards the vulture s to displace them from carrion or from perch sites Presumably all sympatric eagles are also dominant with bald eagles confirmed to easily dominate turkey vultures in Florida 41 79 80 81 However in the tropics Swainson s hawks and yellow headed caracara as well as lesser yellow headed vultures appear to be subservient to turkey vultures 41 82 Furthermore turkey vultures are dominant over crows at carrion but not over common ravens 83 Relationship with humans edit nbsp A side view showing the perforated nostrilsThe turkey vulture is sometimes accused of carrying anthrax or hog cholera both livestock diseases on its feet or bill by cattle ranchers and is therefore occasionally perceived as a threat 41 However the virus that causes hog cholera is destroyed when it passes through the turkey vulture s digestive tract 33 This species also may be perceived as a threat by farmers due to the similar black vulture s tendency to attack and kill newborn cattle The turkey vulture does not kill live animals but will mix with flocks of black vultures and will scavenge what they leave behind Nonetheless its appearance at a location where a calf has been killed gives the incorrect impression that the turkey vulture represents a danger to calves 84 The droppings produced by turkey vultures and other vultures can harm or kill trees and other vegetation 85 The turkey vulture can be held in captivity though the Migratory Bird Treaty Act prevents this in the case of uninjured animals or animals capable of returning to the wild 86 In captivity it can be fed fresh meat and younger birds will gorge themselves if given the opportunity 33 The turkey vulture species receives special legal protections under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 in the United States 7 by the Convention for the Protection of Migratory Birds in Canada 87 and by the Convention for the Protection of Migratory Birds and Game Mammals in Mexico 87 In the US it is illegal to take kill or possess turkey vultures their eggs and any body parts including but not limited to their feathers violation of the law is punishable by a fine of up to 100 000 for individuals or 200 000 for organizations and or a prison term of 1 year 86 It is listed as a species of least concern by the IUCN Red List Populations appear to remain stable and it has not reached the threshold of inclusion as a threatened species which requires a decline of more than 30 percent in 10 years or three generations 1 References editNotes edit a b c d e BirdLife International 2018 Cathartes aura IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22697627A131941613 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22697627A131941613 en Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b c Turkey vulture Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2020 08 23 Retrieved 2007 10 14 a b c d e Attwood E Cathartes aura Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Archived from the original on 2004 04 17 Retrieved 2007 09 30 a b Miskimen Mildred January 1957 Absence of Syrinx in the Turkey Vulture Cathartes aura PDF The Auk 74 1 104 105 doi 10 2307 4082043 JSTOR 4082043 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2006 10 24 a b c d e f Fergus Charles 2003 Wildlife of Virginia and Maryland Washington D C Stackpole Books p 171 ISBN 0 8117 2821 8 Archived from the original on 2021 07 28 Retrieved 2020 08 27 a b c d e f Snyder Noel F R amp Helen Snyder 2006 Raptors of North America 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southern Ontario Canadian Journal of Zoology 69 6 1550 1556 Paulik Laurie 2007 08 06 Vultures and Livestock AgNIC Wildlife Damage Management Web Archived from the original on 2007 08 08 Retrieved 2007 10 15 Paulik Laurie 2007 08 06 Vultures AgNIC Wildlife Damage Management Web Archived from the original on 2007 08 04 Retrieved 2007 10 15 a b Migratory Bird Treaty Act US Code Collection Cornell Law School Archived from the original on 2012 04 24 Retrieved 2007 10 14 a b Game and Wild Birds Preservation US Code Collection Cornell Law School Archived from the original on 2020 01 10 Retrieved 2007 10 29 Bibliography edit Ffrench R Birds of Trinidad and Tobago ISBN 0 7136 6759 1 Stiles and Skutch A guide to the birds of Costa Rica ISBN 0 8014 9600 4 Kirk D A and M J Mossman 1998 Turkey Vulture Cathartes aura In The Birds of North America No 339 A Poole and F Gill eds The Birds of North America Inc Philadelphia PA External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Turkey vulture nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Cathartes aura Turkey vultures on eNature com Turkey vulture media Internet Bird Collection Uncommon light morph turkey vulture photo Turkey vulture photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Live Streaming of a Vulture Feeding Station at Selu Conservancy Radford Virginia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turkey vulture amp oldid 1214730503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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