Exploring the size of Andean condor foraging groups along an altitudinal and latitudinal gradient in the Tropical Andes: Ecological and conservation implications

Author:

Méndez Diego123,Vargas Félix Hernán3,Sarasola José Hernán45,Olea Pedro P16

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ecología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid , Calle Darwin 2, 28049, Madrid , Spain

2. Museo Nacional de Historia Natural , Calle 26 s/n, Cota Cota, La Paz , Bolivia

3. The Peregrine Fund , 5668 West Flying Hawk Lane, Boise, ID 83709 , USA

4. Centro para el Estudio y Conservación de Aves Rapaces en Argentina (CECARA), Universidad Nacional de La Pampa , Avda Uruguay 151, 6300 Santa Rosa, La Pampa , Argentina

5. Instituto de las Ciencias Ambientales y de la Tierra de La Pampa (INCITAP-CONICET) , Avda. Uruguay 151, 6300 Santa Rosa, La Pampa , Argentina

6. Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio Global (CIBC-UAM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid , Madrid, Calle Darwin 2, 28049, Madrid , Spain

Abstract

AbstractPatterns of variation in the size of vulture foraging groups, and their ecological causes and consequences, remain little explored despite strong links with the carrion recycling service that this key functional group provides. We documented the group size-frequency pattern of Andean condors Vultur gryphus gathered to feed on 42 equine carcasses experimentally placed in Bolivia, between 2012 and 2019, along an elevation range of 1,300–4,500 m asl. Based on the location (altitude and latitude) of the foraging groups, we examined the relationship between their size and species’ population parameters (size and trend), habitat conditions, and livestock carcass availability and predictability. Condors utilized a high frequency (93%) of carcasses forming groups that ranged from 1 to 80 individuals (mean = 25, median = 18) and shaped a “lazy-J curve” typical pattern of size-frequency distribution whereby few groups (5, 12%) were large (> 55 individuals) and most (21, 50%) were relatively small (<19 individuals). Group size related to altitude in that most larger groups formed at lower sites (below c. 3,000 m asl), likely following an altitudinal gradient whereby larger groups are more likely to form around larger carcasses (i.e., cattle), which are more likely to occur at lower elevations. Regardless of population size, group size could be an adaptive response of condors via local enhancement for improving individual scavenging efficiency. Many information gaps on this topic still exist, thus we provide a set of questions to address them, especially amidst the unrestricted impacts of human activities that condition vulture survival globally.

Funder

The Peregrine Fund’s Neotropical Science and Student Education Program

British Ornithologists’ Union Small Ornithological Research Grant

Rufford Small Grants Foundation

International Foundation for Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

Reference54 articles.

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2. Mass mortality events and declining obligate scavengers in the Anthropocene: Social feeders may be critical;Baruzzi;Biol Conserv,2022

3. Competitive behaviour and feeding rate in a reintroduced population of Griffon vultures Gyps fulvus;Bosè;Ibis,2007

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