Vultures - Vulture Conservation Foundation (2024)

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  • About us

    Who we are and the work we do

    • Our History

    Read about our the beginnings of the VCF

    • How We Are Run
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    Find out who are part of VCF

  • Vultures
    • Bearded Vulture

    Europe’s Rarest Vulture

    • Cinereous Vulture

    Europe’s Largest Vulture

    • Egyptian Vulture

    Europe’s Only Globally Endangered Vulture

    • Griffon Vulture

    Europe’s most social vulture

  • Our Work
    • Captive Breeding
    • Bearded Vulture EEP
    • Cinereous Vulture EEP
    • Egyptian Vulture EEP
    • Research
    • Tackling Threats
    • Monitoring
    • Bearded Vulture Maps
    • Cinereous Vulture Maps
    • Egyptian Vulture Maps
    • Griffon Vulture Maps
    • Rüppell's Vulture Maps
    • International Bearded Vulture Monitoring Network
    • Reintroduction And Restocking
    • Bearded Vulture to the Alps
    • Bearded Vulture to Andalusia
    • Bearded Vulture To Corsica
    • Bearded Vulture To Maestrazgo
    • Cinereous Vulture Bulgaria
    • Cinereous Vulture France
    • Cinereous Vulture Mallorca
    • Egyptian Vulture Bulgaria
    • Egyptian Vulture Italy
    • Griffon Vulture Cyprus
    • Griffon Vulture Bulgaria
    • Griffon Vulture France
    • Griffon Vulture Sardinia
  • Projects
    • ONGOING PROJECTS
    • LIFE Aegypius Return
    • BalkanDetox LIFE
    • LIFE with Vultures
    • Illegal Killing of Birds
    • Energy Infrastructure
    • COMPLETED PROJECTS
    • Vultures Back to LIFE
    • LIFE GypConnect
    • LIFE RE-Vultures
    • LIFE Rupis
    • LIFE GypHelp
    • Balkan Anti-Poisoning Project
    • Ban Vet Diclofenac in Europe
    • LIFE EUROSAP
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Get to know Europe's vulture species

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The majestic and instantly recognisable sight of a vulture soaring overhead on thermals of air or feeding at a carcass is truly captivating. Two hundred years ago Bearded, Cinereous, Egyptian and Griffon Vultures were among the most common breeding bird species in the mountains of central and southern Europe. Yet the decreasing availability of food, coupled with habitat loss, persecution and poisoning, saw vultures disappear from most of their European range, with populations significantly smaller and increasingly isolated by the 1960s.
Today, as a result of conservation efforts, European vulture populations are steadily recovering. In many regions of their former range, vultures soaring the sky has become a common and spectacular sight again.

BEARDED VULTURE

CINEREOUS VULTURE

EGYPTIAN VULTURE

GRIFFON VULTURE

WHY PROTECT VULTURES?

Vultures feed on carrion, the remains of dead animals, and act as the ‘rubbish collectors’ of the natural world offering a valuable socioeconomic service to local communities. Feeding on animal remains, vultures likely help eliminating potentially harmful bacteria from the environment, potentially limiting the spread of diseases such as anthrax and rabies.

Vulture conservation work not only protects these ecologically important birds but as umbrella species, these efforts also benefit their habitat and other wildlife such as other endangered raptors like Imperial and Golden Eagles as well as large herbivores such as deer, ibex and European Bison.

Did you knowGriffon Vultures' ability to consume livestock carcasses rapidly could significantly reduce Spain's greenhouse gas emissions by 77,344 metric tons of CO2 eq. per year through minimizing the transport of carcasses to processing plants by vehicles. Ecosystem service provision

VULTURES UNDER THREAT

Persecution, poisoning, habitat loss and changes in farming practices leading to decreasing food availability saw Europe’s four species of vultures being driven close to extinction across much of the continent over the 19th and 20th Centuries. Today, due to dedicated conservation actions, the Bearded, Cinereous and Griffon Vulture populations are recovering.

However, Europe’s vulture species still face those historical challenges in some European countries and a range of emerging threats from; poisoning after eating the remains of game animals laced with traces of lead ammunition or livestock treated with veterinary products, and collisions with electricity infrastructure including wind farms and power-lines.

WORKING TOGETHER TO SAVE VULTURES

The once common sight of a Bearded Vulture soaring above the Alps mountain range was consigned to the past in 1913 when the last individual was shot at Aosta Valley. However, a unique partnership spanning five countries involving zoos, government agencies and non-governmental organisations led by passionate conservationists began to reintroduce the species to the mountain chain. The captive-breeding programme commenced in 1978, with the first releases taking place in 1986 in Austria. After breeding and releasing hundreds of birds, today the species is firmly re-established across the Alpine arc with 300 individuals, making the reintroduction project one of the world’s most successful wildlife comeback stories. — vulture conservation can work!

Using our experience in this groundbreaking conservation initiative we have since been collaborating across Europe with governments, businesses, local communities and other non-governmental organizations to protect and conserve the Bearded Vultures as well as the other European vulture species — Cinereous, Egyptian and Griffon Vultures.

ACTION PLANS FOR VULTURE CONSERVATION

Species Action Plans are created by conservation partners, scientists, charities, governments and local groups and are tools for identifying and prioritising measures to restore the populations of vultures across their range. They provide information about the status, ecology, threats and current conservation measures for each species of vulture and list key actions that are required to improve their conservation status.

VULTURE MULTI-SPECIES ACTION PLAN

Officially adopted by the United Nation’s Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), the Vulture Multi-Species Action Plan is the first comprehensive, strategic conservation plan covering the 128 nations where all 15 species of migratory African-Eurasian vultures are found. This plan promotes concerted, collaborative and coordinated international actions to rapidly halt current population declines.

  • Multi-species Action Plan to Conserve African Eurasian Vultures - Summary
  • Multi-species Action Plan to Conserve African Eurasian Vultures

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Vultures - Vulture Conservation Foundation (2024)

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