Neophron percnopterus (Egyptian Vulture)

Scientific name: Neophron percnopterus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Bird group: Birds-of-prey

Field characters. Length 60-70 cm; wingspan 158-163 cm. Much smaller than other vultures. Has a characteristic flight silhouette with long black-and-white wings, and short, wedge-shaped tail. Adult has bare, yellow head and throat, and a whitish ruff on rear head. Plumage creamy white, contrasting with black primaries; scapulars and inner wing-coverts smudged red-buff; ruff and neck washed yellow. Bill thin and hooked. Juvenile black-brown, excepting paler wing-coverts and rump, becoming increasingly more white with each moult.

Voice. Silent.

Distribution. Fairly common in Spain; elsewhere local and scarce.

Habitat. Haunts a variety of open terrains such as steppes, savannahs, plains, sand-banks along rivers and cliffs; it has locally adapted to scavenging on rubbish dumps, and in ports.

Food. Mammal remains, reptiles, amphibians, insects, and occasionally small birds. Feeds on eggs by throwing them on the ground or breaking them by dropping stones on them. Frequently associated with human settlements and then feeding on waste food. Localises food items during searching flight.

Eggs. Blotched brown/red-brown/grey, often unevenly: more heavily at large end, sometimes more heavily at small end. Ground colour white/dirty white/yellowish white. Texture not glossy, often with small notches. Shape subelliptical/short subelliptical. Size 66 x 50 mm (58-76 x 43-56), weight 94 g.

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