The Eurasian griffon vulture ( Gyps fulvus) is a large Old World vulture in the bird of prey family Accipitridae. It is also known as the griffon vulture, although this term is sometimes used for the genus as a whole.
In Portugal a few hundred pairs of griffons nest, but their distribution is strongly asymmetric. The main areas of reproduction are located in Douro International Natural Park, which is home to more than half of the Portuguese population. Though permanently resident in the interior of the country, the griffon vulture often ventures west when the breeding season is over and can occasionally reach the Tagus Estuary Natural Reserve and Cape St. Vincent.
In Ireland, the first record of a griffon vulture occurred in 1843 in Cork. In 2000, a vulture took up residence on Guernsey island.
In Croatia, a Eurasian griffon vulture colony lives near the town of Beli on Cres island. There they breed at low elevations, with some nests at . Therefore, contact with people is common. The population makes frequent incursions in the Slovenian territory, especially in the mountain Stol above Kobarid. The bird is protected in an area called Kuntrep on the Croatian island of Krk.
In Serbia, there are around 450-500 individuals with about 110 pairs of Eurasian griffon vultures around Zlatar mountain and also 35 birds in the canyon of the Trešnjica river.
In Greece, there are nearly 1000 Eurasian griffon vultures. The majority of this population resides in Crete, which hosts the largest insular population of the species in the world. On Crete they inhabit mountainous areas, sometimes in groups of up to 20.
In Cyprus, there was a colony of fewer than 30 Eurasian griffon vultures at Episkopi, in the south of the island in 2006.
In Germany, the species died out in the mid-18th century. Some 200 vagrant birds, probably from the Pyrenees, were sighted in 2006, and several dozen of the vagrants sighted in Belgium the following year crossed into Germany.
In Armenia there are 46-54 pairs according to last estimation of population; the trend demonstrates a slight increase.
The maximum recorded lifespan of the griffon vulture is 41.4 years for an individual in captivity.
As large scavengers, griffon vultures have not been observed to seek shelter for thermoregulation. Vultures use their bald heads as a means to thermoregulate in both extreme cold and hot temperatures. Changes in posture can increase bare skin exposure from 7% to 32%. This change allows for the more than doubling of convective heat loss in still air. Griffon vultures have also been found to tolerate increased body temperatures as a response to high ambient temperatures. By allowing their internal body temperature to change independently of their metabolic rate, griffon vultures minimize their loss of water and energy in thermoregulating. These adaptations have allowed the Griffon vulture to have one of the widest thermal neutral zones of any bird.
The Pyrenees population has apparently been affected by a European Commission ruling that due to danger of bovine spongiform encephalopathy transmission, no carcasses must be left on the fields for the time being. This has critically lowered food availability, and consequently, carrying capacity. Although the griffon vulture does not normally attack larger living prey, there are reports of Spanish griffon vultures killing weak, young or unhealthy living animals when they do not find enough carrion.
Behaviour and ecology
Physiology
Intraspecific competition
Threats
External links
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