Is monitoring alone save the critically endangered Gyps indicus in the Ramadevarabetta Vulture Bird Sanctuary (RVBS) Of Karnataka, India?

Birds are very specific to their respective habitats and are also the key indicators of the environment being susceptible to any change in the habitat or variation in the environment. Vultures play a key role in the wider landscape as providers of ecosystem services, and constitute the habitat’s opt...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Somashekara Rajashekara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National University of Mongolia 2025-05-01
Series:Mongolian Journal of Biological Sciences
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Online Access:https://www.biotaxa.org/mjbs/article/view/86651
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Summary:Birds are very specific to their respective habitats and are also the key indicators of the environment being susceptible to any change in the habitat or variation in the environment. Vultures play a key role in the wider landscape as providers of ecosystem services, and constitute the habitat’s optimal natural animal disposal system, processing carcasses even in cities. Among the various species of vulture birds, Gyps indicus (Scopoli 1786), commonly called as Indian vulture or Long-billed vulture, is practically found throughout the country, and also seen in the urban landscapes of the Bengaluru region. Gyps indicus breeds in southeast Pakistan and peninsular India, south of the Gangetic plain, north to Delhi, east through Madhya Pradesh, south to the Nilgiris, and occasionally further south. Alarmingly, their numbers are reducing, the present study is focusing on the monitoring for their conservation, and an attempt has been made to predict how to increase their numbers.
ISSN:1684-3908
2225-4994