Neha Patil (Editor)

Gyps

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Accipitridae

Scientific name
  
Gyps

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Accipitriformes

Genus
  
Gyps Savigny, 1809

Higher classification
  
Accipitrinae

Gyps Whiterumped vulture Wikipedia

Wingspan
  
Griffon vulture: 2.3 – 2.8 m

Mass
  
Griffon vulture: 6.5 – 11 kg

Length
  
Griffon vulture: 93 – 120 cm

Lower classifications
  
Griffon vulture, White‑backed vulture, Rüppell's vulture, White‑rumped vulture, Himalayan vulture

Birds of kazakhstan gyps himalayensis


Gyps is a genus of Old World vultures in the bird family Accipitridae. Created by Marie Jules César Savigny in 1809, it contains the following extant species:

Gyps Whiterumped Vulture Gyps bengalensis videos photos and sound

  • White-backed vulture, Gyps africanus
  • White-rumped vulture, Gyps bengalensis
  • Cape griffon, Gyps coprotheres
  • Griffon vulture Gyps fulvus
  • Himalayan vulture Gyps himalayensis
  • Indian vulture, Gyps indicus - formerly long-billed vulture
  • Rüppell's vulture, Gyps rueppelli
  • Slender-billed vulture, Gyps tenuirostris - formerly included in G. indicus

  • These are the typical vultures, with bald head, broad wings and mainly dark plumage. They are large scavenging birds, feeding mostly from carcasses of dead animals. Old World vultures find carcasses exclusively by sight. Representatives of this group are found throughout warmer parts of the Old World.

    Gyps FileGyps fulvus LC0197jpg Wikimedia Commons

    Compared to other vultures, Gyps species have quite feathered heads, with characteristic downy covers. Indeed, rather than being an adaptation for scavenging as once thought, it seems to be related to thermoregulation.

    A prehistoric species is known only from fossil remains found in Middle to Late Pleistocene sites all over the central and eastern Mediterranean: Gyps melitensis. Recently, a fossil species Gyps bochenskii has been described from the late Pliocene in Bulgaria

    References

    Gyps Wikipedia