Tagging & Tracking

One of our long-term research objectives is to determine whether the same black vulture pair occupies the shed each year or if occupancy changes, possibly resulting from some form of competition. Another objective of our multi-generational study is to describe relationships between family members from year to year. When three vultures showed up at the shed January 2013, we wanted to know who they were and whether they were related.

Tagging the vultures enables us to identify specific individuals and to determine their inter-relationships. Leg bands or wing tags are placed on many species of birds each year to assist with research regarding parental behavior, migration patterns, survival rates, extended family associations, monogamy, and minimum breeding ages.

Wing tags rather than leg bands are broadly used to identify individual black vultures. This is because vultures regularly urinate on their legs, thereby killing the bacteria that might otherwise accumulate as a result of their walking through carrion while they clean up the environment. This urination also serves to cool their bodies through evaporation. If the kind of leg bands used for other birds were used for vultures, the bands could become encrusted with fecal residue and result in debilitating leg irritation. For this reason, patagial tags are used for vultures. These tags are secured to the birds’ patagium, a fold of skin in the front of their wings. The tags can be read from a considerable distance, both when the vultures are flying overhead and when they are perched. They remain in place for several years, often for the life-span of the bird.

Tri-State is fortunate to have support for our tagging from David Barber of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary. David has extensive experience in wing-tagging and trains others in this procedure. Three interns accompanied David when he tagged a black vulture in northern Delaware on May 7, 2013. They were Marian Wahl of San Francisco, Marta Sendra Vega of Cadiz, Spain, and Hankyu Kim of Seoul, South Korea.

Adult vultures are tagged shortly after their chicks hatch since the adults are much less likely to abandon a nest then.  Chicks are tagged a couple weeks before they fledge, after which they are even more difficult to capture.  Gender was determined by DNA testing.

The pictures below demonstrate the challenges and care involved in capturing, tagging, and tracking black vultures. Click on a picture to enlarge it.

During May and June 2013, four of the five members of one vulture family were tagged with bright yellow wing tags from Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, numbered as follows:
* Adult male: #17 (left wing)
* Adult female (presumed): untagged
* Male chick from adult pair: #26 (left wing)
* Male foster chick from MD: #30 (left wing)
* Male foster chick from MD: #267 (right wing)

On June 20, 2016 two more chicks from the nest were tagged:
• Chick from adult pair #56 (left wing)
• Chick from adult pair #247 (right wing)

On June 6, 2017, two more chicks from the nest were tagged:
• Chick from adult pair #347 (right wing)
• Chick from adult pair #294 (right wing) Died 7/12/17 as a result of a raccoon attack.

Three of these six birds have been sighted since they were tagged:

#17: Adult Male Tagged 5/6/13
5/9/13 Near Middle Run Valley Natural Area, Newark, DE (39d42’52.39” x 75d43’34.67”)
3/9/14 Old Coach Rd x Polly Drummond Hill Rd, Newark, DE (39d42’40.81” x 75d42’40.26”)
5/22/14 Near Middle Run Valley Natural Area, Newark, DE (39d42’52.39” x 75d43’34.67”)
8/6/14 Linden Hill Rd x Polly Drummond Hill Rd, Newark, DE (39d43’02.45” x 75d42’39.35”)
6/11/14 Near Stafford Avenue Park, Newark, DE (39d41’13.43” x 75d43’56.14”)

#26: Male Chick Tagged 6/13/13
9/25/13 New Linden Hill Rd x Boyds Valley Dr, Newark, DE (39d43’15.35” x 75d42’20.10”)
1/12/14 Bridlebrook Lane (?), Newark, DE (39d42’11.99” x 75d46’37.32”)
2/12/16 Woodland Trails, Newark, DE (39d38’52.00” x 75d54’30.00”)
3/3/16 Near Frightland, Middletown,DE (39d31’29.00” x 75d38’55.00”)

#267: Male Chick Tagged 6/13/13
9/25/13 New Linden Hill Rd x Boyds Valley Dr,Newark, DE (39d43’15.35” x 75d42’20.10”)

If you spot any vultures of any species with wing tags anywhere, please report your sighting in the comment section below. In addition, please submit information about US and Canadian sightings to the Bird Banding Laboratory. Include the date and location of the sighting, tag number, species, and any other pertinent information.  In return, the Laboratory will tell you where, when, and by whom the birds were tagged.  Reports can be submitted to BBL online at http://www.pwrc.usgs.gov/BBL/


Comments

Tagging & Tracking — 330 Comments

  1. March 6,2016: Black vulture spotted on Cross Keys Rd, Bern Township, Berks County zip 19605.
    Yellow tag #282 ? or 828?

  2. Theresa- Thank you so much! #26 hatched and fledged from the Vulture shed in 2013 and is affectionately known by many as “Stevie.” Pictures of him are at the “Chicks 2013” page of this website. All here will be happy to know his whereabouts.

  3. Turkey vulture with a group, pale yellow tag on right wing read “TAC”. Merritt Island, FL

  4. I had a yellow tagged buzzard in my yard along with a group that frequents my compost pile . It was #26 on the left wing. This was on March 3, 2016 Near fright land in Middletown, De.

    [#26 a male chick was tagged at Tri-State on 6/13/13.]

  5. I saw a black vulture with an orange wing tag today on Panama City Beach, Florida…could not see any numbers just the orange tag.

  6. Vulture #295 has been hanging at our property in Malvern, PA with a hoard of friends. Wondering if their behavior is changing. We saw them only rarely before this month.

  7. Yellow tag #26. Wanting to eat cat food in my backyard, Woodland Trails in Newark DE. The tag was round, it looked different than the picture in this article

    [#26 a male chick was tagged at Tri-State on 6/13/13.]

  8. We saw a Black Vulture on Jan. 24, 2016 tagged with a yellow tag with black numbers 148 at Phinizy Swamp Nature Park in Augusta, Ga. Can you email me info about this?

  9. We saw a Black-Headed Turkey vulture with the tag JCL on it in the Everglades National Park about 20 miles inside the park from the south entrance.

  10. Today at Fort DeSoto (St. Petersburg, FL) we saw a turkey vulture with an orange tag JMH

  11. I saw a black Vulture with a orange tag on his right wing in Canyon Lake Texas today 01/16/2016 it’s the first tagged bird I have seen and I’m curious what’s up.

  12. I observed a black vulture with wing tag number APT in Startzville,TX (southwest side of Canyon Lake on FM2673 near the Tom Creek Bridge in front of 9610 FM 2673. The bird was trying to get a fox carcass off the road and drag it into the nearby ditch.

  13. We spotted a black vulture with yellow wing band # 243, both sides, in New Bedford, Ma, Buttonwood Park Zoo.

  14. I observed a wing tagged Black Vulture near Dripping Springs, Hays Co., Texas, on 26 October 2015. It was a pale orange wing tag on the right wing with black letters ATP. This observation was on FR 150 and the coordinates are:
    30.1519
    -98.0633
    I also observed this same tagged bird near this same location on 28 April 2015 and reported that here as well at that time.

  15. I just saw a black vulture tagged with yellow wing tag that says TYJ on Kennedy Space Center property

  16. I have a vulture hangs around my area with tag letters TJH I live in KISSIMMEE FL.and the bird seems to be hanging around since FEB. its now July 20 2015. We live east of east lake Toho.

  17. Saw vulture with what appeared to be an orange tag (#705) along the side of the road in Waldorf, MD. this morning. It was located on St. Charles Parkway approximately one quarter mile north of Billingsley Rd.

  18. Well done!! What color was the tag? Color indicates who did the tagging and where it was done.

  19. I am from Media PA I saw a vulture with the number 512 was wondering where he came from I played that number in the lottery that same day and i won

  20. Black vulture with red tag with white numbers 422 in Davidsonville, MD

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