Long-Billed Vulture | Mudumalai Tiger Reserve

The population of the long-billed vulture has seen a steady increase, exhibiting a 74% breeding success rate in the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR).

  • Medium-sized bird of prey native to the Indian subcontinent.
  • Also known as the Indian vulture or Indian Griffon.
  • Distribution & Habitat – Found in India and South East Pakistan.
  • Nests in small colonies, usually on cliffs, constructed with sticks and lined with green leaves and rubbish.
  • Conservation Status –
    • IUCN – Critically Endangered.
    • CITES – Appendix II.
    • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 – Schedule 1.
  • Threats – Forest fires, Use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like diclofenac in treating cattle, Retaliatory poisoning of predators by farmers.
  • Located in – Nilgiri District of Tamil Nadu, at the tri-junction of Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu.
  • Part of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve.
  • Shares boundaries with Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary (Kerala) and Bandipur Tiger Reserve (Karnataka).
  • Moyar River acts as natural division between Mudumalai and Bandipur Sanctuary.
  • Other vulture species observed – White-rumped vulture and Asian king vulture.

Read more about: Vulture Restaurants, Social Costs of Vulture Decline

Source: The Hindu


Previous Year Question

Vultures which used to be very common in Indian countryside some years ago are rarely seen nowadays. This is attributed to   

 [UPSC Civil Services Exam – 2020 Prelims]

(a) the destruction of their nesting sites by new invasive species. 
(b) a drug used by cattle owners for treating their diseased cattle.
(c) scarcity of food available to them.
(d) a widespread, persistent and fatal disease among them .

Answer: (b)


Practice Question

The recent ban on veterinary drugs Diclofenac and Ketoprofen is primarily aimed at protecting which of the following species?

 
 
 
 

Question 1 of 1

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