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White‐headed Vulture Trigonoceps occipitalis shows visual field characteristics of hunting raptors
Authors:Steven J Portugal  Campbell P Murn  Graham R Martin
Institution:1. School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK;2. Hawk Conservancy Trust, Hampshire, UK;3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Berkshire, UK;4. School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 5. 2TT, UK
Abstract:The visual fields of the Aegypiinae vultures have been shown to be adapted primarily to meet two key perceptual challenges of their obligate carrion‐feeding behaviour: scanning the ground and preventing the sun's image falling upon the retina. However, field observations have shown that foraging White‐headed Vultures Trigonoceps occipitalis are not exclusively carrion‐feeders; they are also facultative predators of live prey. Such feeding is likely to present perceptual challenges that are additional to those posed by carrion‐feeding. Binocularity is the key component of all visual fields and in birds it is thought to function primarily in the accurate placement and time of contact of the talons and bill, especially in the location and seizure of food items. We determined visual fields in White‐headed Vultures and compared them with those of two species of carrion‐eating Gyps vultures. The visual field of White‐headed Vultures has more similarities with those of predatory raptors (e.g. accipitrid hawks) than with the taxonomically more closely related Gyps vultures. Maximum binocular field width in White‐headed Vultures (30°) is significantly wider than that in Gyps vultures (20°). The broader binocular fields in White‐headed Vultures probably facilitate accurate placement and timing of the talons when capturing evasive live prey.
Keywords:binocular vision  blind area  foraging  Gyps  vision  vulture
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