Question: Vultures are roosting on my deck. Should I be worried about diseases or bacteria from their poop? Answer: Because of the nature of their diets and digestive system, vulture poop is actually a sanitizer. Amazing! Their stomachs contain digestive acids that kill virtually all bacteria and viruses, and there is even evidence for the claim that they can consume meat infected with anthrax, destroying the virus in their digestive system. After stepping in a carcass, they will often expel their waste, which is white and fluid, onto their legs. The uric acid kills any bacteria that they may have picked up from the dead animal. It is not fun to have vulture waste to clean off your deck. But it comes up quickly and easily with a hose and scrub brush, and you can take comfort in the fact that coming in contact with vulture "whitewash" will not endanger your health. See the above question for tips on discouraging vultures from roosting on your porch.
Question: I have a small dog. I worry about letting her out in the yard alone because there are vultures overhead. Will the vultures bother her? Answer: No, the vultures are not at all interested in moving animals. They will only descend on something that is lying still, and will only approach it if it smells decayed. These peaceful animals will pose no risk to your animals, children, or infants.
Question: What do you call a group of vultures? Answer: A group of vultures is called a "Kettle"
Question: My husband says vultures don't have any sense of smell. I say they can and do smell things. Who is correct? Answer: Congratulations! You are both right! African and Asian vultures, being descended from hawks and eagles, have no sense of smell. This is characteristic of the majority of the bird kingdom. American vultures, however, including the turkey vulture, black vulture, Andean and California condor, and king vulture, CAN smell. The turkey vulture, in particular, has a very well developed sense of smell. These birds are descended from storks and ibises. The turkey vulture has shown itself, in many tests, to use its sense of smell as a predominant means of finding food. Scientists even used turkey vultures to find a leak in a many-mile-long gas pipeline, by pumping a form of gas through the lines that smelled like carrion.
Question: Do vultures find their food by smell or sight? Answer: All vultures find food with their incredible eyesight, but new world (American) vultures have a keenly developed sense of smell, on which they rely for most of their foraging. Turkey vultures use an even combination of smell and sight--whichever reaches them first. The rest of the new world vultures rely partially on smell and more on eyesight, or the activities of turkey vultures. Old world vultures have no sense of smell, and rely solely on eyesight. See above question for further elaboration.
Question: Will a vulture avoid decaying meat if it has gone beyond a point of no return? . Is there anything that a vulture would turn up his beak at? Answer: Yes, vultures WILL turn their nose up at carcasses in advanced stages of putrefaction. They much prefer their meat fresh, but often must wait a few days for the hide to soften enough for their weak beaks to penetrate it. African vultures have much stronger beaks, and henceforth the ability to be much more picky about their diets.
Question: Do vultures scavenge at night? Answer: No, vultures are completely unable to see in the dark
Question: Would vultures circle a moving object, like a vehicle carrying a dead or dying animal? Answer: Contrary to popular belief, vultures do not circle over dead or dying animals. They soar on thermals of warm, rising air. This allows them to best conserve their energy in flight. After rising on the thermal, they glide as far as possible before they need to gain altitude again. You will certainly see vultures in the air over a carcass, but their descent is rapid. They will not just hang out in the air looking at it... They want to eat it. In parts of Asia and Africa, vultures have become very brave and comfortable in the presence of humans. In these areas, they sit around rooftops, markets,and garbage dumps, and have much the same presence among the population as the gulls have among us. In such areas, they will follow carts full of food or garbage.
Question: What exactly does a vulture smell when an animal is dead or dying? Blood? Answer: It is merely the smell of dead flesh. This is apparently a sort of gas produced by the beginnings of decay, because a similar gas was used by a piping company that was trying to find a leak in their gas lines. They pumped this gas through the lines, and where it was leaking out, turkey vultures began to congregate.
Question: What enemies does a vulture have? Answer: coming soon
Question: I found a dead vulture on my farm. Why did the coyotes not eat the body? Answer: coming soon
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