Black Vulture - Coragyps atratus |
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DescriptionThe black vulture is 24-27 inches in length with a wingspan of 54-59 inches. It has a black body; a short, square tail; and a featherless and wrinkled dark gray head and neck. It has weak feet and a relatively weak bill. It has broad round wings that are edged in white on the undersides. Males and females look alike. RangeThe black vulture is found from southern New York and southern Ohio south to Texas and Central and South America. Birds in the northern part if its range may migrate in the fall. It is occasionally seen as far north as Maine. Habitat
The black vulture is found in open areas and breeds in woodlands and thickets. It can often be seen roosting in trees or perched on a fence post. It also glides overhead on thermals searching for food. | DietThe black vulture is a scavenger. It eats dead animals or carrion. Occasionally, it eats weak, sick, or young birds and mammals. Unlike the turkey vulture, the black vulture uses sight, not smell, to locate food. It hunts for food in groups. It flies high in the air until one of the group spots food. The group then descends to the ground and digs into their find. The black vulture's featherless head prevents dead and rotting meat from collecting in its feathers. Life CycleThe female black vulture lays 2 eggs under a bush, in a hollow log, under large rocks, or in a cave. Both the male and the female incubate the eggs for 32-41 days. The chicks fledge when they are 63-70 days old. BehaviorThe black vulture is very protective of the carrion it finds and aggressively drives the larger turkey vulture away from a find! It is normally a silent bird, but it hisses, grunts, and even barks to drive other scavengers away from its food. |
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Audio Credit: xeno-canto.org Bernabe Lopez-Lanus |