Vultures protect us, help us protect them
These important birds that provide free environmental services that benefit us all need our help.
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Back from the brink of extinction
After suffering dramatic population declines in recent years, vultures are making a comeback in Europe
OUR WORK
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Keep up to date with the latest news from the Vulture Conservation Foundation and our partners working across Europe
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Follow vultures across Europe and beyond
Using the latest technology to help us monitor vultures in the wild to help inform conservation measures
TRACKING VULTURES

WHY PROTECT VULTURES?

Vultures often get a bad reputation and are perceived as lowly scavengers, but they play a crucial role in the environments in which they live. Known as ‘nature’s clean-up crew’, these scavengers do the dirty work of cleaning up after death, helping to keep ecosystems healthy and providing significant socioeconomic value to local communities. 

Here at the Vulture Conservation Foundation (VCF), we are sustainably growing our conservation work to protect Bearded Vultures, Griffon Vultures, Egyptian Vultures and Cinereous Vultures to ensure that they have a bright future in Europe.

OUR WORK

The Vulture Conservation Foundation is the world’s leading wildlife organisation solely dedicated to protecting, conserving and restoring Europe’s four species of vulture. With decades of experience of vulture conservation we have significant expertise in; captive breeding vultures for conservation, reintroducing vultures into areas where they have disappeared, tackling the threats vultures face and monitoring and tracking birds in the wild.

CAPTIVE BREEDING

We own most of the Bearded Vultures in captivity in the world and collaborate with over 40 zoos and breeding centres to coordinate the captive breeding of Bearded Vultures in Europe. Captive breeding plays a vital role in reintroduction programmes.

MONITORING

We closely monitor all of Europe's vulture species to study and understand their behaviour to help inform more accurate conservation actions. This includes tagging many individuals with GPS tags.

REINTRODUCTION

We are involved in multiple reintroduction-restocking projects to bring species back in areas where they disappeared or boost local populations across Europe for the Bearded Vulture, Cinereous Vulture, Griffon Vulture and Egyptian Vulture.

RESEARCH

Apart from following vulture research outputs to inform current and future conservation strategies, our staff and board members are leading scientists shaping vulture conservation research.

TACKLING THREATS

We mitigate the threats European vultures face head-on through executing concrete conservation actions, developing action plans and sharing our expertise.

OUR PROJECTS

Our projects are based on our decades of experience and founded on the best available science tailored to each species’ behaviour and ecology, the threats they face and the habitats they depend on. Utilising our expertise, we collaborate with governments, businesses, local communities and other non-governmental organisations to develop and deliver conservation initiatives that protect Europe's vultures.
The Cinereous Vulture nest discovered in Artà © CAIB

First Cinereous Vulture nest found outside Mallorca’s Serra de Tramuntana

In a major breakthrough for bird conservation in Mallorca, a Cinereous Vulture ...
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Some items discovered in different ancient Bearded Vulture nests. (A) Hooves typical of ungulate limb remains. (B) Diverse mammal and bird bones and teeth found in the same nest, some partially digested. (C) The remains of Bearded Vulture eggshells, with the typical orange coloration due to the iron oxide applied by the adult birds to their breast feathers. (D) Several goat horns found in the same ancient nest. (E) Typical solid Bearded Vulture droppings accumulated in their ancient nests. Photographs: Sergio Couto.

Bearded vultures: your unusual (natural) history custodians 

Bones, wool… but also footwear, pieces of basketry, leather, even a crossbow ...
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Cinereous Vulture killed by electrocution on a power line © Quercus cover

Two Cinereous Vultures electrocuted on power lines in Tejo Internacional, Portugal 

Following the identification of several cases of bird mortality by electrocution in ...
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© Bruno Berthemy

What is IBM and why is it important?

The recovery of the Bearded Vulture (Gypaetus Barbatus) in Europe is one ...
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