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Himalayan Griffons

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Facts about Himalayan Griffons

  • The Himalayan Griffon Vulture, Gyps himalayensis, is an Old World vulture. It belongs to the family Accipitridae, which also includes eagles, kites, buzzards, and hawks.
  • This vulture is a typical vulture, with a bald white head, very broad wings, and short tail feathers.
  • It has a white neck ruff and yellow bill and the whitish body and wing cover contrast with the dark flight feathers.
  • The Himalayan vulture mostly lives in the Himalayas on the Tibetan plateau (India, Nepal and Bhutan, central China and Mongolia).
  • It is also found in the Central Asian mountains (from Kazakhstan and Afghanistan in the west to western China and Mongolia in the east).
  • Occasionally it migrates to northern India but migration usually only occurs attitudinally.
  • Recently, Himalayan Griffons died of suspected poisoning in Assam.

About:

  • It is one of the 22 species of large carrion-eating birds that live predominantly in the tropics and subtropics.
    • They act an important function as nature’s garbage collectors and help to keep the environment clean of waste.
      • Vultures also play a valuable role in keeping wildlife diseases in check.

Species in India:

  • India is home to 9 species of Vulture namely the Oriental white-backed,  Long-billed, Slender-billed, Himalayan, Red-headed, Egyptian, Bearded, Cinereous, and Eurasian Griffon.
    • Most of these 9 species face the danger of extinction.
    • Bearded, Long-billed, Slender-billed, and Oriental white-backed are protected in Schedule 1 of the Wildlife Protection Act 1972. Rest are protected under ‘Schedule IV’.

What are the threats:

  • Poisoning from diclofenac is used as a medicine for livestock.
    • Loss of Natural Habitats due to anthropogenic activities
    • Food Dearth and Contaminated Food
    • Electrocution by Power lines.

 Efforts to save them

  • In India, the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) launched a Vulture Action Plan 2020-25 for the conservation of vultures in the country.
    • To study the cause of death of vultures in India, a Vulture Care Centre (VCC) was set up at Pinjore, Haryana in 2001.
    • Later in 2004, the VCC was upgraded to being the first Vulture      Conservation and Breeding Centre (VCBC) in India.

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