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Vultures Dine At Turkish Carrion Restaurant

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  • Vultures Dine At Turkish Carrion Restaurant

    VULTURES DINE AT TURKISH CARRION RESTAURANT
    By Sarah Dowdey

    Discovery News
    http://news.discovery.com/earth/vultures-dine -at-turkish-carrion-restaurant.html
    Feb 23 2010

    Ask someone what his or her favorite animal is and most probably
    won't answer "vulture." That doesn't mean the threatened scavenging
    birds don't have their defenders, though. According to NatGeo News
    Watch and Cagan Å~^ekercioglu, senior research biologist at Stanford
    University, vultures are so threatened by the toxins found in their
    carrion's flesh, they sometimes need special preserves stocked with
    clean meat to thrive. Call it the vulture's version of the regional,
    organic, neighborhood restaurant.

    A new such restaurant just opened in Igdır, Turkey, near the Armenian
    border in eastern Anatolia. The region is especially important to
    four types of vultures: Egyptian, griffon, bearded and black. Turkish
    officials and conservationists like Å~^ekercioglu hope that a fresh
    selection of untainted carrion will protect these species from the
    toxic hazards that have decimated populations in other parts of the
    world. California condors were so threatened by the lead shot lacing
    their scavenged meals, the bullets are now banned within their range.

    In northern and central India, the livestock drug diclofenac, present
    in the cow carcasses vultures feed upon, nearly drove the birds to
    extinction. Such veterinary medicines can damage vultures' kidneys.

    For anyone skeptical of why vultures should be preserved in the first
    place, the situation in India provides a compelling case. Vulture
    deaths there started a nasty cycle: The scavengers became the scavenged
    as feral dogs started eating the poisoned birds. Booming packs of
    feral dogs meant an increased threat of rabies in humans.

    It's easy enough to see why Turkey would wish to avoid such a
    situation.

    The big question though is where does all this clean meat come from?

    Å~^ekercioglu says it will be a mix of "road kill, butcher shop
    remains, the carcasses of farm animals that have died naturally
    [...] or animals like wild boars that have been killed by local
    hunters." (Don't worry, no lead poisoning here; the hunters use
    copper bullets for their boar hunting.) And if vulture fine dining
    sounds like something you'd like to make your own reservation for,
    the new restaurant will also feature hides for tourists, wildlife
    photographers and residents to watch from. Bon appetit!

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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