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News: A captive-bred, radio-tagged White-rumped Vulture released in Mudumalai Tiger Reserve died due to electrocution after its release in April 2026.
About White-rumped Vulture

- The White-rumped Vulture is a small ‘Old World’ vulture native to South and Southeast Asia.
- Scientific name: Gyps bengalensis
- Alternative Names: It is also known as the Indian White-backed Vulture or the Oriental White-backed Vulture.
- Habitat: It is found mostly in plains with open areas, light woodland, villages, and cities, and it is occasionally seen in hilly regions.
- Distribution: It is native to India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Pakistan, Myanmar, Cambodia and southern Vietnam.
- Extinction: It is extinct in China and Malaysia.
- Characteristics:
- Appearance: Adults have blackish body feathers, a white neck-ruff, and a white patch on the lower back, while juveniles have brown feathers with white streaks.
- Size: It is a medium-sized vulture measuring about 75–85 cm in length, and both sexes are approximately equal in size.
- Behaviour: It is highly social, forms large flocks and communal roosts, and regularly gathers at carcasses.
- Breeding: It breeds in colonies on tall trees, often near human habitation.
- Diet: It is an obligate scavenger that feeds on fresh and decaying animal carcasses.
- Threats
- Rapid population decline is caused by Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) such as diclofenac, aceclofenac, and ketoprofen used in livestock, which cause kidney failure and visceral gout in vultures.
- Other major threats include habitat loss, deforestation, poisoning, electrocution, collisions, and reduced food availability due to changes in livestock management.
- Conservation Status
- IUCN Red List: Critically Endangered
- Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I



