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International Vulture Awareness Day is coming – some of our zoo partners are organizing great events!

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International Vulture Awareness Day is already this weekend, and some of our partners are organizing a number of great events that highlight vulture conservation and awareness.

The Zoobotanico Jerez de la Frontera (Spain) for example is organizing a full day of talks and children workshops on the 8th September – see enclosed programme, while Zoo de La Boissière du Doré (France) is organising a day long programme for this Saturday (2nd September), including an exhibition on vultures, games and activities for children, and a fundraising event for the VCF. On the other hand Zoo Duisburg has already organised a great event last weekend (see photos).

The full list of activities programmes for the IVAD is listed on a website that allows people to learn about the activities and develop new collaborations or exchange information.

If you are thinking to organize something on vultures – it can be something as simple as a talk, or a walk to watch vultures, please register your event in the IVAD website (http://www.vultureday.org/)

Vultures play a very important role in the world´s ecosystem – they are nature’s clean-up crew. They don’t kill, they eat the flesh of other dead animals, thus helping to reduce the spread of disease and eliminating the need for the treatment and incineration of thousands of tons of animal remains every year, saving us millions of euros in waste management and potential emissions of hundreds of thousands of tons of C02 per year.

Unfortunately, they face a range of threats and so populations of many species are under pressure and some species are facing extinction – the VCF is working hard in Europe to minimize those threats and actively work on the ground with several populations to increase them.

More globally, the VCF and its partners have developed a Vulture Multi-Species Action Plan (MsAP), prepared in the framework of the Convention for the Migratory Species, that list the priority actions that need to be taken in order to improve the conservation status of 15 species of old world vultures. The Vulture MsAP will hopefully be approved by all signatory states in the next Conference of the Parties this fall, and will then be a significant tool to address these massive poisoning incidents and therefore revert the decline of several vulture species.

It is important to promote the conservation of vultures to a wider audience and highlight the important work being carried out by the world’s vulture conservationists, and so the coming International Vulture Awareness Day is a great opportunity.

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