Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

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Re: Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

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Hooded vultures in Ghana and South Africa on the brink, study says

Sean Mowbray, 16 Sep 2024, Africa

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  • A new study on hooded vulture populations in Ghana and South Africa shows low genetic diversity, placing the birds at threat of disease outbreaks and environmental change.
  • South Africa only has an estimate 100-200 hooded vultures left, while Ghana’s population is larger but declining.
  • As scavengers, hooded vultures remove corpses from ecosystems; their absence can lead to health risks for humans and wildlife.
  • Researchers say their findings should spur greater conservation action to protect the birds, including from belief-based hunting practices.


High rates of inbreeding among hooded vultures in Ghana and South Africa spell trouble for their future, according to a newly published study. The study found that despite wide differences in the population size of the birds in the two countries, both face similar risks associated with low genetic diversity. It underlined the need to protect hooded vultures (Necrosyrtes monachus) in both countries from hunting and habitat loss.

Researchers gathered molted feathers from vulture nests in Ghana, where this species is considered highly endangered due to rapid population declines but remains abundant for now, and in South Africa, where it’s estimated that only 100-200 mature adults remain, mostly in Kruger National Park.

Despite the variance in their overall population size, the birds in both countries showed high levels of inbreeding and low genetic diversity — a “troubling” finding, according to the authors.

The study showed that while the number of hooded vultures in South Africa is dwindling, there’s still a basis for their population to recover. “It still does have some unique genetic components which are important to conserve,” said study co-author Sandi Willows-Munro, an associate professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.

Hooded vultures play a critical ecosystem role in both countries, scavenging on carcasses and thus removing disease and potentially harmful bacteria. Low rates of genetic diversity would mean that these populations are vulnerable to threats, such as disease outbreaks, and less adaptable to environmental change.

Researchers had initially thought that Ghana’s relatively large population of hooded vultures meant they would be genetically more diverse than their South African counterparts. But according to Willows-Munro, their findings suggest that the West African country’s population is “not doing so well” genetically. This could leave them highly vulnerable to disease outbreaks, such as avian flu.

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A pair of hooded vultures in Ghana’s Mole National Park. Results of genetic sampling show that the species’ population here has high levels of inbreeding, complicating conservation efforts. Image courtesy of Nico Arcilla.

The reason why Ghana’s hooded vulture population shows such high levels of inbreeding is unclear. One theory, Willows-Munro said, is that the species may have passed through a genetic bottleneck long ago, when it experienced a dramatic population decline due to climatic shifts as some of the country’s grasslands became forests.

It may also be due to a more recent phenomenon, caused by human-driven actions. It’s a question the research team is continuing to investigate and which it hopes to shed light on in future studies.

“The take-home message is that you can’t just count the numbers of vultures and populations and equate that to whether there’s a healthy population or not,” Willows-Munro said.

The price of losing vultures
Hooded vultures are considered critically endangered and are in the midst of a large population decline across their range. Like many other vulture species in Africa, they face an array of threats, including habitat loss, poisoning, collisions with electricity lines, and hunting for “belief-based use.”

These birds were once ubiquitous in Ghana, said study co-author Justus Deikumah, a conservation biologist with University of Cape Coast in Ghana and West Africa representative for the vulture specialist group at the IUCN, the global wildlife conservation authority. They species has become less abundant in recent decades due to a variety of pressures, Deikumah said, including their use in traditional medicine. Conservationists have recently launched a multiyear action plan specifically targeting this threat.

In South Africa, vultures are under pressure due to both intentional and unintentional poisoning, with their parts also used in traditional medicine. A study published in 2021 found that one single association of traditional health practitioners harvested as many as 800 vultures per year for such purposes in the Kruger to Canyons Biosphere Region.

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An adult hooded vulture in South Africa returns to its nest. Image courtesy of Lindy Thompson.

For Johannes Masopa Mphelo, a sangoma or traditional medicine practitioner and president of the Traditional Healers Association of Southern Africa, the use of vulture parts comes from a misinterpretation of traditional medicine. “There is no way we can use vultures to heal or to generate medicine,” he said. “We’re only using herbs from the ground and only using parts from the trees.”

Mphelo, who is also a police officer, said that in his home region of Limpopo province, South Africa, the birds are poisoned by people who believe their parts can bring worldly success. “There is no such benefit of becoming rich or healing people with vulture parts,” he said. “It’s all a lie.”

In his view, losing vultures will harm South African communities. “If we kill vultures, what is it that we are going to have in the future? Because our children and our grandchildren will never know the vulture,” Mphelo said.

The decline in vulture populations may prove to have health impacts for those communities as well. By scavenging carcasses, vultures cleanse landscapes of corpses, thus removing harmful bacteria and diseases. A paper published earlier this year linked a precipitous decline of vulture populations in India to the deaths of more than 500,000 people between 2000 and 2005. These findings are cause for concern in Africa too, say experts such as Deikumah.

As vulture numbers decline, other scavengers such as feral dogs can increase. Unlike vultures, they can then act as disease reservoirs, potentially spreading rabies and other diseases. Research in Ethiopia, for instance, found that as vulture numbers visiting abattoirs fell, dog numbers doubled, potentially increasing the risk of rabies for local communities.

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A griffon vulture (Gyps fulvus) in India. A study published earlier this year linked the country’s massive decline in vulture populations to around 100,000 deaths each year over a five-year period. Image by Hari K. Patibanda via Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0).

Studies directly linking vulture declines to the spread of disease in Africa are lacking, but experts say such scenarios could easily play out.

“It’s really important that that we preserve these species because they give us such an important sanitation service,” Willows-Munro said. “In South Africa, where we have huge vaccination campaigns against rabies, we still have a big problem. In other countries that have less-established vaccination programs, I can imagine the impact is going to be even worse.”

Curbing the threats
Researchers say there’s a number of steps governments and communities could take to protect vultures and counteract the diminishing genetic diversity found in South Africa and Ghana. They propose captive breeding, reintroductions, supplementary feeding, GPS tracking to better understand population movements, and ongoing genetic monitoring.

André Botha, co-chair of the IUCN’s Vulture Specialist Group, said the study could help spur conservation action. “It highlights the need for conservation action in the peripheral populations, or the edge populations, within South Africa,” he told Mongabay.

The study also underlines the need for far greater protection for the birds in Ghana, and West Africa more broadly, where threats are high.

Mphelo said that in South Africa, raising awareness of the precarious position the birds are in could help combat the practice of hunting them for traditional medicine uses.

“People need education. They need to be educated about the importance of vultures for nature,” he said. “Because vultures have also got a right to life.”


Citations:
Le Roux, R., Colmonero-Costeira, I., Deikumah, J. P., Thompson, L. J., Russo, I. M., Jansen van Vuuren, B., & Willows-Munro, S. (2024). High conservation importance of range-edge populations of hooded vultures (Necrosyrtes monachus). Scientific Reports, 14(1). doi:10.1038/s41598-024-68756-2.

Mashele, N. M., Thompson, L. J., & Downs, C. T. (2021). Uses of vultures in traditional medicines in the Kruger to Canyons Biosphere Region, South Africa. Journal of Raptor Research, 55(3). doi:10.3356/jrr-20-36.

Frank, E., & Sudarshan, A. (2023). The social costs of keystone species collapse: Evidence from the decline of vultures in India. SSRN Electronic Journal. doi:10.2139/ssrn.4318579.


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Re: Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

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Carrion regardless — Cape vulture’s return a ‘huge step forward’ for species’ conservation

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Cape Vulture were observed scavenging off a naturally predated carcass while four more circled above in a historic first for Shamwari Game Reserve since the reintroduction of the bird. (Photo: Chris Elsey)

By Jamie Venter | 29 Jan 2025

Cape vultures observed scavenging off a naturally predated carcass for the first time sparks optimism for the future of the species through ongoing conservation efforts.
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The unmistakable stench of death is caught in the air, a predator scraps the source, and vultures are circling. But these scavengers are not a harbinger of doom. Instead the birds are a signal of hope for the species and a return to their vital role as nature’s clean-up crew.

The carcass of a blesbok killed by an unknown predator became the setting of an exciting observation at Shamwari Private Game Reserve on Friday, 24 January, when about 15 Cape vultures were sighted scavenging on the remains. It’s the first time wild vultures have been seen feeding on the remains of a naturally predated animal at Shamwari.

Vultures are obligate scavengers and rely on predators to hunt and to break through the tough hide of carcasses that their beaks cannot penetrate in order to feed, so the presence of vultures on the blessbok kill is a “huge step forward for vulture conservation”, said Kerri Wolter, CEO of the vulture conservation organisation Vulpro at Shamwari.

“Historically the area was not vulture friendly,” explained Wolter. Farming and land-use practices limited the number of predators that would have created feeding opportunities, driving vultures out of the area in search of resources.

“Vultures were persecuted by landowners and farmers,” said Wolter, adding that vultures were “poisoned due to human-wildlife conflict which also resulted in the birds not being present in the area”.

However, the area has changed and land being turned into reserves has made it safer for the birds, and the return of wild Cape vultures “means the balance is being restored to its former natural state which is extremely exciting”, said Wolter.

Clean beak of health

Vultures are experts in waste management because they feed on the carrion of recently deceased animals. According to the World Wide Fund for Nature vultures help prevent the spread of disease by consuming meat and bone fragments before they rot, and are essential to the health of the wider ecosystem.

The Raptor Research Foundation found that decline in vulture populations has disrupted the regulation of disease, since carcasses are left to decompose for longer and mammalian scavengers are more exposed to diseased carrion as a result. These scavengers, such as jackals and dogs, are then able to spread viral transmission through contact with other wildlife, livestock and humans.

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A Cape Vulture that could not be released back to the wild due to injury is kept in captivity at the Vulpro at Shamwari breeding facility so that its offspring may one day be released into the wild population. (Photo: Jamie Venter)

“The loss of vultures could lead to serious ecological and public health consequences, such as the spread of disease from unprocessed carcasses and increased human-wildlife conflict, including the rise in stray dog populations and associated rabies cases,” said the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) in marking International Vulture Awareness Day 2024.

The reduction of vulture populations in India has been linked to the spread of disease and the rapid loss of vultures has reportedly caused about 100,000 additional human deaths per year as a result.

According to the DFFE, in South Africa there has been a similar dramatic decline in wild vulture populations over the past 30 years due to various threats including poaching practices like poisoning, collisions with energy infrastructure such as powerlines and wind turbines, and continuing habitat loss.

Safeguarding a species

Currently there are only 6,357 breeding pairs of Cape vulture globally, which is why Vulpro at Shamwari set its sights on population restocking and supplementation through the release of captive-bred vultures in the Eastern Cape.

The first captive-bred Cape vulture chick was hatched on Tuesday, 11 June 2024 and is expected to be released in 2025.

Despite this success, the threats continue to pose daily challenges, with birds succumbing to injuries associated with powerline collisions and electrocutions in the area.

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Cape Vultures were observed scavenging off a naturally predated carcass while four more circled above in a historic first for Shamwari Game Reserve since the reintroduction of the bird. (Photo: Chris Elsey)

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Vultures are obligate scavengers and thus rely on predators to hunt and leave carcasses for the bird species to feed on. This role is pivotal in preventing the spread of disease to other wildlife, livestock and humans. (Photo: Chris Elsey)

“We have also had wild, captive-bred and rehabbed birds that have died fairly recently from the close-by wind farms,” Wolter said.

“This shows these deaths are not related to captive-bred birds or rehabbed birds, but in fact that this is a major threat all vultures are facing in the country.”

There is nowhere safe for vultures in South Africa, but given the rampant poaching in the lowveld coupled with the Eastern Cape’s vast available space and the vultures’ ability forage widely, Wolter believes that when the odds are weighed up this area is “potentially the safest place in a country that is not safe”.

“We know that we are going to have fatalities, but the idea is to have more successes than fatalities,” Wolter explained. “If the birds disappear for good and we try to look at reintroduction, it is incredibly difficult to get communities to remember living in harmony with a forgotten species.

“When a species disappears we become too accustomed to using those resources or those areas that would have been inhabited by that species, so we need to have that constant reminder of the species otherwise there is no chance of trying to put the birds back in a safe manner.

“Reintroducing Cape vultures to Shamwari is not just important, it’s a transformative step in our conservation journey,” said Wolter, adding that their presence will enhance the ecological integrity of the reserve and the entire Eastern Cape. DM


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Re: Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

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From our Editor - Taryn van Jaarsveld - Africa Geografic

Cape Vultures have graced the skies of the Eastern Cape for the first time in 30 years – yet more proof that nature has a flair for dramatic comebacks. Over 80 wild vultures were spotted near Mountain Zebra National Park, and conservationists are practically doing cartwheels.
Many vulture species are teetering on the edge due to habitat loss, collisions with energy infrastructure, poisoning, trade in vultures for belief-based purposes, and negative public perception. But, this reappearance in the Eastern Cape could be a sign that these feathered clean-up crews are making a slow but steady return. As Kerri Wolter from Vulpro – which recently moved their rehabilitation centre to Shamwari in the Eastern Cape – says, vultures are starting to return to their historical roosting sites. “Vultures are nature’s misunderstood heroes. By recognising them as crucial ecological guardians we can re-write the story around vultures and inspire meaningful conservation.” So, here’s to vultures – those disease-fighting, eco-friendly waste disposal warriors of the wilderness. Let’s hope this is a sign they’re back in business and soaring high!


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Re: Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

Post by Richprins »

^Q^ ^Q^ O\/

Great news, only reading the Shamwari story now! :o0ps: \O


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Re: Threats to Vultures & Vulture Conservation

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Sometimes there are good news \O


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