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Content with tag gyps fulvus .

Decline of transhumance will negatively to impact vulture communities

An international team of scientists reveals in a new study that the abandonment of traditional livestock farming activities, such as transhumance, could be detrimental to scavenger communities....

Scientific study reveals that vulture diet is shaped by culture

A scientific team found that vultures have different diet patterns depending on the place where they breed, regardless of the available resources.

This indicates that they have different...

Griffon vultures can move over an area of up to 10,000 km2 in a year

A scientific team led by the Miguel Hernández University of Elche with the collaboration of the Doñana Biological Station – CSIC has analysed the basic patterns of movements of several...

Tourism in protected areas could negatively affect scavenger's movements

A new study from CSIC, University of Seville and Miguel Hernández University shows that Griffon vultures breeding in a natural park tended to avoid the core touristic areas on those days with a...

Current sanitarian regulations are not enough for avian scavengers' conservation

A scientific team has studied how the use of human-origin food resources, such as landfills and intensive livestock farms, by Eurasian griffon vultures can negatively impact their conservation. ...
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