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Subspecies
Monotypic species
Genus
Members of the Gypaetus genus are very large vultures, having extremely long wings, and a very long, wedge-shaped and pointed tail. The bill is powerful for a vulture, and compressed. Long black bristle-like feathers project forward from the base of both the upper and lower mandibles. A patch of similar bristles project downward from the chin, from which derives the name ‘barbatus’: Bearded Vulture. The adults are white on the head and below; washed with rusty; young are much browner. This extremely distinct genus has a number of anatomical peculiarities not mentioned above. The skeleton resembles that of Neophron and Gypohierax th which it mat be related. The genus contains only one species, which lives in the mountains of Eurasia and Africa.
Physical charateristics
Listen to the sound of Lammergeier
Copyright remark: Most sounds derived from xeno-canto
wingspan min.: | 235 | cm | wingspan max.: | 275 | cm |
size min.: | 105 | cm | size max.: | 125 | cm |
incubation min.: | 55 | days | incubation max.: | 60 | days |
fledging min.: | 100 | days | fledging max.: | 120 | days |
broods: | 1 | eggs min.: | 1 | ||
eggs max.: | 2 |
Range
Habitat
Reproduction
Nests are usually placed in niches, overhung ledges, or caves in crags, not necessarily at very high altitudes (from 1,200 to 14,000 feet in the Himalayas) and often in gorges at the lower levels of mountain ranges. The structure is large, flattish, from five to eight feet across and a few inches to two feet deep, made of dead sticks with a broad shallow cup lined with wool, hair, dung, rags, etc, not green leaves. The nest often contains many bones, skulls, hooves, and horns, and it and the nesting cave, and the cliff near it, are often very heavily plastered with droppings. One to two eggs are laid, pale rufous buff or dull salmon colour, mottled and clouded with brown and purple.
Generally the female only incubates, beginning with the first egg which hatches in about 53 days. The downy young is brooded by the parents for most of the time, up to at least three weeks old. Later in the fledging period, the young behaves much like that of a large eagle, being left alone much of the time in the nest, fed at irregular intervals, and walking about or lying down, soliciting the parent or any other large bird of prey for food. Only one young one is ever reared, so far as is known. Young in south Europe are normally out of the nest in August from eggs laid in February, and in Tibet by the end of July from eggs laid late in February or early March, so that the incubation and fledging period is about 160-170 days, of which 53 is incubation, and 107-117 fledging. Both parents tend, brood, and feed the young. Females may brood more and males bring more food in the early stages. Food brought to the nest may be carried in the feet, the bill, or the old bird’s crop. In the latter case it will be regurgitated on to the nest and fed to the young. Prey, with large young, is brought at infrequent intervals, one-and-a-half to three hours or more. The Bearded Vulture seems to be able to tear up prey in the manner of an eagle when feeding young, but also holds out large lumps, which the young, which has a very wide gape is able to swallow whole. Prey brought to the nest includes large bones, unsplit, but bones are also dropped on rocks near the nest to split them
After leaving the nest the young remains in the vicinity for some time, and is fed by the adult. Despite the length of the breeding cycle this species breeds annually where undisturbed, perhaps this varies as many nest-sites are found unoccupied.
Feeding habits
Video Lammergeier
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Conservation
The species is sedentary. The global population is not concentrated in Europe, but the species persists in Spain (Pyrenees), Turkey, France (Pyrenees and Corsica) and Greece (Crete and the continent). The European population is 162 breeding pairs, with 93 in the EU; additionally North Africa has 5 pairs in Morocco. Only the Spanish and Turkish populations number 50 breeding pairs or more. The Lammergeier is widely distributed in mountainous regions in Eurasia and Africa with a small proportion of its global range in Europe. There are apparently large populations in East Africa, Central Asia and the Himalayas. The species is resident throughout its range. In Europe, the species now breeds only in Andorra, Spain (regions of Navarra, Aragon and Catalua, all in the Pyrenees), France (Pyrenees, Corsica and the Alps), Greece (in Crete and on the continent in Thrace, Epirus, Thessaly and the Pindus range), Turkey (throughout Anatolia) and in North Africa, only in Morocco (Atlas range). The total population for Europe and North Africa is ca. 167 pairs of which 148 breed regularly, including 112 pairs in the EU of which 93 breed regularly.
The species was exterminated from Germany by 1855, Switzerland 1884, Bosnia and Herzegovina 1893, Austria 1906, Italy 1913, Romania 1935, Czechoslovakia 1942, Yogoslavia (Serbia, Montenegro) 1956, Bulgaria 1966, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in 1990. The decline continued during 1970-1990 in Greece and Albania. However, the species is locally stable, or decreasing only slightly in Russia, stable in Turkey and France and increasing in Spain. A reintroduction project in the Alps (Austria, France, Italy and Switzerland) has released 68 captive bred birds during 1986-1996 at 5 release sites. The number of free-flying birds is estimated at 38-43. One pair laid eggs in the French Alps in 1996 and hatched one chick in 1997. The decline is still progressing in Greece. Its main reasons are direct persecution and poisoning. Recently habitat loss, lack of food resources due to abandonment of extensive livestock economy and disturbance by tourism and recreational activities have also had adverse effects.
Migration
Distribution map