Showing posts with label vulture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vulture. Show all posts

Monday, February 23, 2015

Turkey Vultures Amazing Nose Mini Documentary




Turkey Vultures Amazing Nose

It is one of the most sensitive noses in the Animal Kingdom.  Experts estimate that  the turkey vulture, can detect the scent of rotting flesh in concentrations as tiny as a few parts per billion in the air.  The olfactory lobe of its brain, responsible for processing smells, is particularly large compared to that of other animals. Combine that with the unique design of its nostrils which are not divided by a septum improving air sampling (from the side one can see right through the beak) and you have the turkey buzzard with the superpower of smell.

The Turkey Vulture tracks plumes of odor from decaying animals while gliding high up in the air column and homes in on them by flying in circles. Their sense of smell is so acute that they can even locate carrion below the forest canopy or something as small as a dead mouse or rat under a pile of leaves,

Contrary to popular belief  Turkey Buzzards are clean birds -  baking off bacteria and grooming while spreading their massive six foot wingspan in the sun – and their nostril design makes it easier to keep rotten meat from clogging them.

In contrast Black Vultures have traditional bird nostrils and can't locate food by smell and must rely on their keen vision to find carrion. From a distance as far as a few miles, black vultures will watch the behavior of turkey vultures. They see when a turkey vulture is making smaller and smaller circles around an area and when the turkey vultures go to the ground the black vultures follow. Buzzards preform a valuable service cleaning up the remains of dead animals, especially the many unfortunate animals killed on the roads everyday and reducing the spread of disease. They much prefer freshly dead animals and will not eat extremely rotten meat, the Turkey Vultures amazing sense of smell insures most carcasses are found early and don't go to waste!

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Sunday, December 14, 2014

Turkey Vulture Sunbathing to Clean Wings

Turkey Vulture

Turkey Vulture Basking in the Afternoon Sun

Turkey Vulture at Cape Canaveral National Seashore, Florida seeing to personal hygiene, contrary to common belief they are very fastidious about their appearance. Exposing the vast expanse of their 5-6 foot wingspan to the strong afternoon sun helps to reduce bacteria and small pests and keeps them looking good! 

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Black Vulture and Turkey Vulture Preening Behaviour



A preening Turkey Vulture and Black Vulture in the backyard are taking their appearance, hygiene, and feather maintenance very seriously. It is also unusual for two individual vultures of different species to spend the night roosting so closely together. I am always impressed with the quiet dignity of large vultures at roost. You might change your mind about vultures after watching these two attractive neat freaks. One has to look their best before heading out for a day of eating roadkill - which is a valuable service.

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Black Vulture and Turkey Vulture Preening


Saturday, December 21, 2013

Magnificent Turkey Vulture Wingspan



The largest visitor to the Backyard (an Eagle has never been filmed at rest) - is an impressive migrating Turkey Vulture that spent the night in the long-leaf pines behind the backyard and spent some time warming up in the morning sun before soaring to find the nearest roadkill. Seeing the full wingspan of nearly 6 feet was a delight - play this at full HD on a large screen.

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Turkey Vulture Wings and Wingspan





Thursday, September 26, 2013

Handsome Turkey Vulture Strikes a Pose



Turkey Vulture or Buzzard in Florida

Turkey Vulture Striking a Pose

An uncommon capture of a large Turkey Vulture looking rather dignified and handsome and just relaxing on a fence post perch in a remote grassland area of central Florida.

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