** Turkey Vulture **

View The Turkey Vulture
Photography of Bruce Dayton

Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos

 

Turkey Vulture
Cathartes aura

Large soaring bird
Long wings and tail
Body feathers entirely blackish-brown
Red head mostly unfeathered
Size: 25-32 in
Wingspan: 67-70 in
Weight: 70.6 ounces
Sexes appear similar, but female slightly larger

Syllables:   Tur-key Vul-ture
Pronunciation:   tuhr ki    vuhl chEr

 

Fine Wildlife Photos taken in the
Finger Lakes Region of Central New York

 

Click on a Picture for a larger image

 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
1-1 TkVu_08x10_003262 8x10 Print $10.00
1-2 TkVu_11x14_003262 11x14 Print $25.00
 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
2-1 TkVu_08x10_006930 8x10 Print $10.00
 

Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos

Turkey Vulture
3-1 TkVu_08x10_006936 8x10 Print $10.00
 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
4-1 TkVu_08x10_012571 8x10 Print $10.00
 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
5-1 TkVu_08x10_024221 8x10 Print $10.00
5-2 TkVu_11x140_024221 11x14 Print $35.00
5-3 TkVu_16x20_024221 16x20 Print $45.00
 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
6-1 TkVu_08x10_024224 8x10 Print $10.00
6-2 TkVu_11x14_024224 11x14 Print $35.00
6-3 TkVu_16x20_024224 16x20 Print $45.00
 
Turkey Vulture Pictures, Prints and Photos
Turkey Vulture
7-1 TkVu_08x10_024236 8x10 Print $10.00
7-2 TkVu_11x14_024236 11x14 Print $35.00
7-3 TkVu_16x20_024236 16x20 Print $45.00
 

Turkey Vulture pictures larger than 8x10 may vary slightly from as shown.

NOTES

1.  Price (See above)

2.  Price is for print only. Price does not taxes**.

3.  At this time framing is not an option available online.

4.  All sales in US dollars.

5.  New York State residents must include sales tax**

** Tax will be applied to orders shipped to New York State.

 

No charge for shipping and handling for any order $25.00 or more. For all orders under $25.00 a flat rate of $5.00 will be charged.

 

Discount on all prints for 
Educational and Religious Institutions, Native American Tribes, 
Government Agencies and other Eligible Organizations.


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The Turkey Vulture (Cathartes aura)
is the most common North American  vulture. It is an extremely graceful bird in flight. It seldom needs to flap its long wings once airborne, but soars high overhead looking for carcasses.

Despite the similar name and appearance, this species is unrelated to the Old World vultures in the family Accipitridae, which includes eagles, hawks, kites and harriers. The American species is a New World vulture in the family Cathartidae.

These large birds of prey are mostly brownish black, but the flight feathers are gray, creating a contrasting pattern. The head is small in proportion to the body and has no feathers on it; adults' heads are red and immixtures' are black. The birds have a wing span of about 2 meters. While soaring, they hold their wings in a V-shape and often tip "drunkenly" from side to side, sometimes causing the gray flight feathers to look silvery as they catch the light. The flight style, small-headed and narrow-winged silhouette, and underwing pattern make this bird easy to identify at great distances.

The Turkey Vulture is found in open and semi-open areas throughout the Americas from southern Canada to Cape Horn. It is a permanent resident in the southern United States but northern birds may migrate as far south as South America.

These birds soar over open areas, watching for dead animals or other scavengers at work. Unlike most other birds, they also rely on smell to help locate their food. They also eat some vegetation.

The nesting site is in a protected location: on a cliff, inside a hollow tree or in a thicket. There is little or no construction of a nest. Females lay two eggs, cream-colored with brown spots. Both parents incubate, and the young hatch at around 40 days. The adults regurgitate food for them and care for them for 10 to 11 weeks.

Often, small to large groups of these birds spend the night at communal roosts. Favored locations may be reused for many years.

This bird got its common name because the adult's bald red head was thought to resemble that of a male Wild Turkey.

In the United States, this species receives special legal protections under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.

 

Turkey Vulture 

Scientific classification

         Kingdom:  Animalia
         Phylum:   Chordata
         Class:   Aves
         Order:   Accipitriformes
         Family:   Cathartidae
         Genus:   Cathartes
        
Species:   Aura

Binomial name
Cathartes aura

 

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