Tizón & western Mali – a love affair

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Tizón – the young Egyptian vulture tagged last September in Spain – is still alive and in western Mali, in the same wider region where he spent most of his time since he crossed the Sahara Desert last October.

Tizón was found disoriented and suffering malnutrition last August in Extremadura, and after a short period of rehabilitation was released on the 24th September in the Sierra de Hornachos with a tag, set up by the Junta de Extremadura (the regional government), AMUS (a local nature conservation NGO) and the VCF.

Tizón quickly migrated through Morocco and crossed the desert through Mauritania but then spent a few weeks in October last year on the Mauritania-Mali border. He then embarked on a long trip, first going south (almost reaching Bamako, Mali´s capital), then flying East into Burkina Faso, before returning west to the Mali-Mauritania border, continuing all the way west into Senegal, before making a U-turn back to western Mali in January this year, where he has spent the last 3,5 months (see the map).

Adult Egyptian vultures are already back to Europe and starting to breed here. However, juvenile Egyptian vultures often stay one or two years in Africa before their first migration back north.

Stay tuned for more developments…

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