Articles for tag: ecosystem health, scavenger decline, vultures, wildlife conservation

Griffon vulture in flight over Carmel mount, Israel

Vanishing Vultures Could Have Hidden Costs for the Planet

April Joy Jovita

Vultures are nature’s cleanup crew, rapidly consuming carcasses and preventing the spread of disease. Their decline, however, is disrupting ecosystems, slowing decomposition, and allowing bacteria and flies to flourish. Without these efficient scavengers, the balance of many environments is shifting, raising concerns about public health and ecological stability. How Vultures Accelerate Carcass Decomposition Vultures are ...

A large black bird perched on top of a tree branch

Why Are Vultures Creating Havoc in The Midwest

Suhail Ahmed

  Across quiet Midwestern towns, a strange drama is unfolding in the sky: dark-winged vultures circling above freshly built homes, tearing at roof shingles, shredding pool covers, and leaving behind a mess that smells like a chemical weapons exercise. What once felt like a distant wildlife issue has become an urgent neighborhood problem, complete with ...

brown bird on gray metal fence during daytime

Why Vultures Are Nature’s Janitors – and Why We Need Them

Suhail Ahmed

They arrive like quiet rumors on a thermal, drawing spirals in the sky until the ground pulls them down to work. Vultures – maligned, meme-ified, misunderstood – are the most efficient clean-up crew in the animal world, and their shift never ends. When they vanish, rot lingers longer, other scavengers crowd in, and bacteria multiply ...