Dear all,
This may be of your interest
Gradual recovery continues for Egyptian Vultures in Bulgaria - Vulture Conservation Foundation
Best, have a great Sunday,
José Tavares

<Image.jpeg>--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Life for Egyptian vulture" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to life-egyptian-vu...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/life-egyptian-vulture/AS2P195MB239170F91FFF3CFF41C7E1C1A895A%40AS2P195MB2391.EURP195.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM.
Dear Michel,
Many thanks for your message and for pointing us to that reference on Bearded Vultures in the Bale Mountains.
You are absolutely right that food availability is a key determinant of reproductive output, and we fully agree that trophic conditions in Menorca likely play an important role. However, given the format of the paper (a short letter), we were limited in the scope of the discussion and had to focus mainly on documenting the exceptional nature of the case itself.
That said, if food availability alone were the main driver, one would expect to detect many more cases of Egyptian Vulture nests with three chicks in Menorca, considering the long-term monitoring effort and the generally favourable trophic conditions on the island. The fact that such cases remain extremely rare suggests that additional factors (demographic, individual or stochastic) are probably involved.
Thank you again for your thoughtful comment and for sharing your work.
Best,
Pascual