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I keep Serengeti clean


I keep Serengeti clean
Photo Information
Copyright: Subhrojyoti Banerjee (subhrojyoti) Silver Note Writer [C: 3 W: 0 N: 32] (190)
Genre: Animals
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2008-04-04
Categories: Mammals
Camera: Canon 40 D, Canon EF 100 mm F2.8 Macro USM, Hoya Cir Polarizer 77mm
Exposure: f/5.6, 1/500 seconds
More Photo Info: [view]
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2008-06-18 2:13
Viewed: 1152
Points: 4
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
Rüppell's Vultures are highly social, roosting, nesting, and gathering to feed in large flocks. They can travel fast at need, cruising at up to 35 km/h, and will fly as far as 150 km from a nest site to find food. They can reach great heights, 6,000 m (20,000 ft) is not uncommon, and on one exceptional occasion, an aircraft over the Côte d'Ivoire collided with a Rüppell's Vulture at the astonishing altitude of 11,300 m (37,000 ft), the current record avian height. They have a specialised hemoglobin alphaD subunit of high oxygen affinity which makes it possible to take up oxygen efficiently despite the low partial pressure in the upper troposphere.

They are creatures of the more arid and mountainous areas of Africa: particularly semi-desert and the fringes of deserts. They roost on inaccessible rock ledges if these are available, or in trees, usually Acacia. When thermal updrafts start to develop enough lift, about two hours after sunrise, Rüppell's Vultures leave the roost and begin to patrol over the plains, using their exceptionally keen eyesight to find large animal carcasses, or carnivores which have made a kill. They will wait, several days if necessary, until a carnivore leaves a carcass. They have been known to take live prey on occasion, but this is rare.

Rüppell's Vultures have several adaptations to their diet and are specialized feeders even among the Old World vultures of Africa. They have an especially powerful bill and, after the most attractive soft parts of a carcass have been consumed, they will continue with the hide, and even the bones, gorging themselves until they can barely fly. They have backward-facing splines on the tongue to help remove meat from bone.

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Critiques [Translate]

Hi Subhrojyoti,
Nice and detailed shot. Colors are a bit washed out.

This vulture is somewhat extraordinary, normally they watch the ground while flying. This one is sitting on the ground, watching the sky. TFS
Ali

Hi Subhrjyoti,

Interesting photo and comment. This shows a strange sitting posture when compared to other vulture types.

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