Diet of Turkey Vultures
- The turkey vulture roosts with a group in a large tree or city building and then forages alone. Pockets of heated, rising air—or thermals—allow the bird to soar in upward spirals. This bird can fly low for six hours scavenging under forest canopies, open areas and farms.
- Fresh carrion includes small mammals to dead cattle. Sometimes turkey vultures join black vultures at a large carcass. Other food sources include shoreline vegetation, fruit, pumpkin, pieces of crops, some insects and other invertebrates.
- After stepping in its carrion and eating, the turkey vulture urinates on its legs to cool them through evaporation and to kill bacteria with acids. The turkey vulture does not suffer ill effects from eating infected or diseased flesh.
- The turkey vulture sometimes vomits partially digested meat to ward off other animals. The vomit can sting the animal’s face.
- Habitat ranges from grasslands, cliffs, forests, savannas and cities. Distribution ranges from South America to southern Canada. This range extends northward with the warming climate of northeastern North America, where turkey vultures can benefit from cleared land and increasing road-kill.
Scavenging Behavior
Diet
After Eating
Food as Defense
Habitat Advantages
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