Red-headed vulture

Sarcogyps calvus

The red-headed vulture , also known as the Asian king vulture, Indian black vulture or Pondicherry vulture, is an Old World vulture mainly found in the Indian subcontinent, with small disjunct populations in some parts of Southeast Asia.
Red-headed Vulture Showing Off Ranthambore NP is all about tigers, naturally, but there are plenty of other wildlife highlights to enjoy. It has a very healthy vulture population, which is something special in India after >90% of all vultures died in the recent diclofenac and related environmental population crash. This one is doing something I have only rarely seen vultures do in Africa and never in India - spreading its wings as if to expose itself or dry its wings. I had never before realized that it had the bright red, featherless skin patches that you can see in the photo as these are usually covered up. We had luck in that a cow had died from natural causes and the vultures had a chance to gather around to get what they could before a Leopard or Tiger found the carcass and took it over for themselves. For those considering a trip to Ranthambore - this was in Zone 7. Geotagged,India,Rajasthan,Ranthambore National Park,Red-headed vulture,Sarcogyps calvus,Winter

Appearance

It is a medium-sized vulture of 76 to 86 cm in length, weighing 3.5–6.3 kg and having a wingspan of about 1.99–2.6 m . It has a prominent naked head: deep-red to orange in the adult, paler red in the juvenile. It has a black body with pale grey band at the base of the flight feathers. The sexes differ in colour of the iris: males have a paler, whitish iris, whilst in females it is dark brown.
Red-headed Vulture - Left Red-headed Vulture (on the left) sat on some dead bamboo next to a Gaur corps being munched on by some Indian Vultures! :) Rare to see it in this part of India...  woohoo! :) Geotagged,India,John Rowell,Kabini,Red-headed Vulture,Sarcogyps calvus,Wildlife,Winter,adhocphotographer,redearth

Distribution

This gaudy-faced vulture was historically abundant, range widely across the Indian subcontinent, and also eastwards to south-central and south-eastern Asia, extending from India to Singapore. Today the range of the red-headed vulture is localized primarily to northern India. It is usually in open country and in cultivated and semi-desert areas. It is also found in deciduous forests and foothills and river valleys. It is usually found up to an altitude of 3000m from sea level.

Status

The red-headed vulture used to be declining, but only slowly; in 2004 the species was uplisted to near threatened from least concern by the IUCN. The widespread use of the NSAID diclofenac in veterinary medicine in India has caused its population to collapse in recent years, however. Diclofenac is a compound now known to be extremely poisonous to vultures. The red-headed vulture population has essentially halved every other year since the late 1990s, and what once was a plentiful species numbering in the hundreds of thousands has come dangerously close to extinction in less than two decades. Consequently, it was uplisted to critically endangered in the 2007 IUCN Red List.

Several NSAIDs have been found to be harmful to scavenging birds. Diclofenac, carprofen, flunixin, ibuprofen and phenylbutazone were associated with mortality. Meloxicam has thus far been found to be "Vulture-Safe" and its use in veterinary treatment of livestock is being encouraged.

Habitat

This gaudy-faced vulture was historically abundant, range widely across the Indian subcontinent, and also eastwards to south-central and south-eastern Asia, extending from India to Singapore. Today the range of the red-headed vulture is localized primarily to northern India. It is usually in open country and in cultivated and semi-desert areas. It is also found in deciduous forests and foothills and river valleys. It is usually found up to an altitude of 3000m from sea level.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderAccipitriformes
FamilyAccipitridae
GenusSarcogyps
SpeciesS. calvus
Photographed in
India