Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India

<p>Four species of vultures were surveyed using road transects in two parts of the Moyar Valley, three of these are Critically Endangered by IUCN criteria and one is Endangered.  The vulture study was done for the first time in Nilgiri North Forest Division and Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve of...

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Main Authors: R. Venkitachalam, S. Senthilnathan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society 2016-01-01
Series:Journal of Threatened Taxa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/2522
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spelling doaj-6ac5283584ff49dc9d8506df137646fd2020-11-25T02:21:02ZengWildlife Information Liaison Development SocietyJournal of Threatened Taxa0974-78930974-79072016-01-01818358836410.11609/jott.2522.8.1.8358-83641859Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern IndiaR. Venkitachalam0S. Senthilnathan1Ph.D. Scholar, PG Research and Department of Zoology, Government Arts College (affiliatted to Bharathiar University), Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu 641018, IndiaPG Research and Department of Zoology, Chikkana Government Arts College (affiliated to Bharathiar University), Tirupur, Tamil Nadu 641602, India<p>Four species of vultures were surveyed using road transects in two parts of the Moyar Valley, three of these are Critically Endangered by IUCN criteria and one is Endangered.  The vulture study was done for the first time in Nilgiri North Forest Division and Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve of Moyar Valley to determine the flock size in the three species of vultures and also to get a rough estimation of vultures. The results show higher flock size and higher densities in Nilgiri North Forest Division than in Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve and the most numerous of these was the White-rumped Vulture.  There is also evidence of seasonal movements in Nilgiri North Forest Division.  These data represent the first systematic survey results from the area and demonstrate the significance of the Moyar Valley for all four Endangered vulture species, probably the main stronghold remaining in southern India.  They are White-rumped Vulture <em>Gyps bengalensis</em>, Indian Vulture <em>Gyps indicus</em>, Red-headed Vulture <em>Sarcogyps calvus</em> and Egyptian Vulture <em>Neophron percnopterus</em>.  The study recommends that immediate long-term conservation efforts should be taken to save the Critically Endangered vultures in the Moyar Valley.</p><div> </div>http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/2522ConservationFlock sizeMoyar Valleypopulationseasonal variationvultures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Venkitachalam
S. Senthilnathan
spellingShingle R. Venkitachalam
S. Senthilnathan
Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
Journal of Threatened Taxa
Conservation
Flock size
Moyar Valley
population
seasonal variation
vultures
author_facet R. Venkitachalam
S. Senthilnathan
author_sort R. Venkitachalam
title Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
title_short Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
title_full Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
title_fullStr Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
title_full_unstemmed Status and population of vultures in Moyar Valley, southern India
title_sort status and population of vultures in moyar valley, southern india
publisher Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society
series Journal of Threatened Taxa
issn 0974-7893
0974-7907
publishDate 2016-01-01
description <p>Four species of vultures were surveyed using road transects in two parts of the Moyar Valley, three of these are Critically Endangered by IUCN criteria and one is Endangered.  The vulture study was done for the first time in Nilgiri North Forest Division and Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve of Moyar Valley to determine the flock size in the three species of vultures and also to get a rough estimation of vultures. The results show higher flock size and higher densities in Nilgiri North Forest Division than in Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve and the most numerous of these was the White-rumped Vulture.  There is also evidence of seasonal movements in Nilgiri North Forest Division.  These data represent the first systematic survey results from the area and demonstrate the significance of the Moyar Valley for all four Endangered vulture species, probably the main stronghold remaining in southern India.  They are White-rumped Vulture <em>Gyps bengalensis</em>, Indian Vulture <em>Gyps indicus</em>, Red-headed Vulture <em>Sarcogyps calvus</em> and Egyptian Vulture <em>Neophron percnopterus</em>.  The study recommends that immediate long-term conservation efforts should be taken to save the Critically Endangered vultures in the Moyar Valley.</p><div> </div>
topic Conservation
Flock size
Moyar Valley
population
seasonal variation
vultures
url http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/2522
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