Vultures 

189 creative works found

  • We are all falling down

  • "Voluptuous Vulture"
    by TrEaSuReDiMaGeS

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    This is a King Vulture It is large and predominantly white, with gray to black ruff, flight, and tail feathers. Its head and neck are bald, with the skin color varying, including yellow, orange, blue, purple, and red. The King Vulture has a very noticeable yellow fleshy carnucle on its beak. This vulture is a scavenger and it often makes the initial cut into a fresh carcass. It also displaces smaller New World Vulture species from a carcass. King Vultures have been known to live for up to 30 years in captivity. This photo was a bit of a challenge shooting, I had to go through chicken wire that was all around the exhibit.

  • Vulture Tree
    by Cassandra Ford

    US$17.10–US$91.20

    A dead Hawaiian tree and a baby vulture skull. Together at last. 2008.

  • Prince
    by Firedrake

    US$3.71–US$98.80

    Behold his beastly majesty. / / A big new addition to my bestiary – watercolour, pen, chalk pastel, copper leaf on canvas. He is biggish…35×28cm. As well as on the crown there are little bits of copper throughout. / / / / Crappy shot but it shows the scale: / / / / Shiny shiny / Shiny beast with feathers!

  • Turkey Vulture
    by Gene Praag

    US$3.71–US$98.80

    Turkey Vulture in the desert in Utah. /

  • They Hunger
    by Ravenor

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    . / .

  • Angel of Death
    by Macky

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    White Cape Vulture – South Africa

  • Wacom tablet drawn in CorelPainter, digital acrylics

  • These are two photos I shot. The background was the sky one evening over Ft. Pierce Florida. And the other is a Turkey Vulture I had taken a photo of at our local zoo. I’ve post edited both photos in PS CS2. / Turkey Vultures ave a highly developed sense of smell, and are able to detect carrion by that sense alone, from very long distances. The carrion is detected long before it starts rotting too much, vultures will avoid eating badly rotten flesh, possibly because of lethal bacteria, & prefer fresh meat (in fact will often bathe after eating). The larger vultures have keen eyesight & a poorer sense of smell, relying on the smaller vultures to find the carrion & then chasing them off. Some of the larger vultures prefer to eat the parts that the smaller ones can’t (such as the skin & tough tendons), leaving the rest for the smaller vultures. Early theories on the success of Turkey vultures included a highly developed sense of hearing able to detect the sound of flies around the carcass, the ability to spot small flesh eating rodents heading towards the carcass and an “occult” sense that humans could not detect. Other vultures do use sight to detect carrion, both directly & by observation of other vultures heading down towards the carcass. / Turkey vultures do NOT eat live animals. They will not hurt your pets or children. / A group of vultures is called a “Venue”. Vultures circling in the air are a “Kettle”. / American Vultures can smell, but African vultures cannot. The Turkey Vulture has the best sense of smell of the American vultures. The Vulture poop is actually a sanitizer! Their uric acid is so strong (because of the nature of their diets) that it kills bacteria. / Vultures have excellent eyesight, but, like all other birds, they have poor vision in the dark. American vultures find food both with their eyesight and sense of smell. / Vultures prefer to eat fairly fresh meat. They will turn their nose up at rotten meat if there is any alternative available. They also prefer the meat of herbivorous animals, avoiding that of dogs and other carnivores.

  • “Hypnotize”
    by TrEaSuReDiMaGeS

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    This is a piece I’ve reworked in my portfolio titled “Vuluptuous Vulture” From the first time I saw this bird, he has intrigued and captivated me with his eyes. I was privledged to see 4 of these birds. Although all were in captivity. / I’ve altered and merged the original photos in PS. I have such Passion for Nature and it’s amazing colors!! Vultures serve a useful purpose in disposing of dead and decaying animal remains, as well as in cleaning up in areas of poor or non-existent sanitation. This, however, does not make them popular with people. / The bare head and neck enables them to become fouled up in their efforts to obtain food without endangering their plumage. / Their feet are designed for perching, and are not adapted to seizing and killing or holding prey, as are those of the Eagles, Hawks, and Owls. Their bills are quite tiny, compared to other birds of prey, which make them unable to penetrate the carcasses of large animals. However, the King vulture has a more powerful bill than other American vultures. It usually arrives on the scene well after other species of vulture. But when it does turn up for the feast the others give way to it, apprehensive of its hefty bill. / Vultures rarely attack living animals, and then only when the animal is disabled or dying of disease or injury. / The King vulture, also known as the American king vulture, is the most strikingly colored of the New World vultures. It has a yellow fleshy crest on the bill, the bare skin of the head being yellow and red. The plumage is black and grey with a rose-yellow tinge. It measures 30 inches. / King Vultures are birds of tropical lowland forests from Central America south as far as southern Brazil. The King vulture feeds on carrion, Dead and decaying flesh.which it locates (one of the few birds to do so) with its sense of smell. King vultures do not build nests; the female simply deposits her single egg in the hollow of a rotten tree trunk or in a crack caused by age or lightning. The parents take turns incubating the egg. / The young are naked when hatched, but very soon they are covered with a white or buff down. They do not acquire their adult plumage until 18 months of age. These birds breed well in captivity.

  • Out Of The Shadows
    by Isabel Odriozola

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    A vulture at our local bird centre. This was just before it got a little too friendly with my camera through the mesh haha X)

  • GPS
    by Hagen

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    GPS

  • salt and pepper
    by Paul Scarsella

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    The Turkey Vulture, Cathartes aura, also known in North America as the Turkey Buzzard (or just “buzzard”), is a bird found throughout most of the Americas. One of three species in the genus Cathartes, in the family Cathartidae, it is the most common of the New World vultures, ranging from southern Canada to the southernmost tip of South America. It inhabits a variety of open and semi-open areas, including subtropical forests, shrublands, pastures, and deserts. The Turkey Vulture is a scavenger and feeds almost exclusively on carrion. It finds its meals using its sense of smell, flying low enough to detect the gases produced by the beginnings of the process of decay in dead animals. In flight, it uses thermals to move through the air, flapping its wings infrequently. It roosts in large community groups. Lacking a syrinx—the vocal organ of birds—its only vocalizations are grunts or low hisses. It nests in caves, hollow trees, or thickets, generally raising two chicks each year, which it feeds by regurgitation. It has very few natural predators. In the United States of America, the vulture receives legal protection under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918. With a wingspan of 173–183 cm (68–72 in) and an average weight of 1.4 kg (3.1 lb), the Turkey Vulture is a large bird. It has dark brown to black plumage, a featherless, purplish-red head and neck, and a short, hooked, ivory-colored beak. The Turkey Vulture received its common name from the resemblance of the adult’s bald red head and its dark plumage to that of the male Wild Turkey, while the name “vulture” is derived from the Latin word vulturus, meaning “tearer” and is a reference to its feeding habits.

  • Vulture
    by Jonah Gautier

    US$5.70–US$152.00

  • trial lawyer vigil
    by J.K. York

    US$3.71–US$98.80

    a combination title thanks to Chris and Suni. vultures in O’Leno State Park, FL. USA. OM-2n. 300mm zuiko. Fujichrome sensia 400.

  • Warbird on the Oilfields
    by ixia

    US$3.71–US$98.80

    These things really exist.

  • Vulture
    by Madeline M. Allen

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    Smudge Art TM. / Photography By: Madeline M. Allen Thank you for viewing my work. Image copyright © 2007, Madeline M. Allen Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited

  • Vulture
    by Cheri McEachin

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    Not sure if this would sell but I wanted to make him cute..lol / /

  • LAMMERGEIER VULTURE
    by pinkyjain

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    Colored pencil

  • Quite friendly people, but sometimes strange things are happening…

  • Vultures Of Death
    by C J Lewis

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    © C J Lewis. Art work done on computer using PhotoPlus6 for blending, painting, air-brushing and smudging.

  • King Vulture
    by TrueBavarian

    US$3.42–US$91.20

  • Hi
    by Jacky

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    king vulture..also known as beasty

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