Vultures and Livestock: The Where, When, and Why of Visits to Farms

Open Access
Authors
  • M. García-Alfonso
  • T. van Overveld
  • L. Gangoso ORCID logo
  • D. Serrano
  • J.A. Donázar
Publication date 11-2020
Journal Animals
Article number 2127
Volume | Issue number 10 | 11
Number of pages 20
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
The abandonment of carcasses around livestock farms has been recently legalized in Europe. Since little is known about how vultures use this kind of resource, we aimed to determine the main drivers of vultures’ visits to farms. We evaluated the effects of characteristics of both birds and farms regarding the way that vultures visit farms thanks to data collected from 45 GPS-tagged Egyptian Vultures and most farms on Fuerteventura Island, Spain (318 farms with >94% of insular livestock). We found that farms were more visited when they were located close to highly predictable feeding places, when they had more available food, and during the vulture breeding season, whereas farms located close to roads and vultures’ breeding territories received fewer visits. Younger territorial birds visited a farm more frequently than older territorial ones, whereas older non-territorial individuals concentrated those visits on farms closer to their main centers of activity compared with younger ones. Our findings indicate that visits to farms were determined by their spatial distribution regarding bird activity centers, availability of carcasses, seasonality, and vulture characteristics. Hence, these factors should be considered in vulture conservation, avoiding very general solutions that ignore population structure and that could be not enough to protect the biodiversity.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10112127
Downloads
animals-10-02127 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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