Dear colleagues,
During the 2025 breeding season monitoring of Egyptian Vultures, we have documented a nest with three nestlings. After a quick (non-exhaustive) literature search on clutch size in the species, we found no references to such cases, as the typical number of chicks per nest is one or two.
We are planning to publish a very short letter documenting this case once the breeding season is completed (as of today, the three chicks are still in the nest and have not yet fledged).
Do you happen to know of any published reference (article, book, monograph, etc.) or unpublished record mentioning a clutch size of three eggs or the successful hatching and/or fledging of three chicks in this species, anywhere in the world? Any information, even from grey literature or personal observations, would be very welcome.
I hope everything is going well.
Best regards,
Pascual

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On 07/25/2025 7:22 AM WEST Şafak Arslan <safak....@dogadernegi.org> wrote:Dear Pascal,Congratulations on this find!During the 2020 breeding season, we monitored 90 breeding pairs in the Beypazarı region of Türkiye. One of the pairs had three chicks, although only two successfully fledged.I’m attaching the article for your reference. (https://www.researchgate.net/publication/362930140_Breeding_biology_of_the_Egyptian_Vulture_Neophron_percnopterus_in_the_Beypazari_area_Turkey)Best regards,Şafak ArslanKoruma Programı KoordinatörüConservation ManagerDoğaBirdLife in Turkey
Pascual Lopez <lopez....@gmail.com>, 24 Tem 2025 Per, 18:48 tarihinde şunu yazdı:
Dear colleagues,During the 2025 breeding season monitoring of Egyptian Vultures, we have documented a nest with three nestlings. After a quick (non-exhaustive) literature search on clutch size in the species, we found no references to such cases, as the typical number of chicks per nest is one or two.We are planning to publish a very short letter documenting this case once the breeding season is completed (as of today, the three chicks are still in the nest and have not yet fledged).Do you happen to know of any published reference (article, book, monograph, etc.) or unpublished record mentioning a clutch size of three eggs or the successful hatching and/or fledging of three chicks in this species, anywhere in the world? Any information, even from grey literature or personal observations, would be very welcome.I hope everything is going well.Best regards,Pascual—————————————————Dr. Pascual López LópezAssociate ProfessorUniversity of ValenciaMovement Ecology Lab“Cavanilles" Institute of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology—————————————————
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