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005        20150126124321.0
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024 8    |a FI00900182
245 00 |a With the Wild Things: Vultures |h [electronic resource].
260        |a Ft. Myers, Florida : |b Whitaker Center in the College of Arts and Sciences, Florida Gulf Coast University.
300        |a 2 podcasts, approximately 1 minute each in length
506        |a Please contact the owning institution for licensing and permissions. It is the users responsibility to ensure use does not violate any third party rights.
520 2    |a Source: Vultures 1 Length of Segment: 00:01:19 Hi, I'm Dr. Jerry Jackson, out with the wild things. The head of an adult turkey vulture is red and bare of feathers and its bill is whitish at the tip. These characteristics help us identify it. For their first few months, however, young turkey vultures lack the red color on the head and have a black bill. These differences in the young birds are important badges of rank, identifying them as clumsy kids prone to mistakes and not responsible for social blunders. Young turkey vultures are sometimes mistaken by birders for black vultures, but can always be identified by their long tail, browner plumage, and the way they hold their wings in a 'V' as they fly. At first, young turkey vultures follow their parents in search of food, learning the ropes of food finding. Within a few weeks, they're on their own. Turkey vultures tend to hunt solitarily and typically, only one will be at a carcass at a time, unlike the more social black vulture. In late afternoon, however, turkey vultures gather at communal roosts for the night. It's at these roosts where a great deal of social interaction takes place and where the juvenile's different appearance earns it forgiveness for breaches of vulture etiquette.
520 2    |a Source: Vultures 2 Length of Segment: 00:01:30 Hi, I'm Dr. Jerry Jackson, out with the wild things. Turkey vultures are late risers as birds go. Not because they sleep more, but because they wait for winds or thermals that allow efficient soaring. Flapping-flight is energetically expensive and turkey vultures have mastered the art of taking advantage of a free lift. As the ground heats up in the morning, the hot air rises, and a turkey vulture has only to lift its wings to sail off in search of food. Wind can allow an early departure, however, especially if the turkey vultures roost on a cliff or building such as they do on the Dade County Courthouse. Morning sea breezes strike the courthouse and are deflected upward, providing the vultures with an elevator to breakfast. Roosting turkey vultures can often be seen perched with outstretched wings. At times, they're testing the air currents and readying themselves for a lift-off. At other times, they may be hanging their wings out to dry. Dew collected on their feathers overnight reduces a vultures’ soaring efficiency, and getting them dry first is important. A turkey vulture may also hold its wings open and exposed to the sun to regulate its body temperature and perhaps to combat feather parasites. Such nuances of vulture behavior celebrate the complexity of interactions between these birds and their environment.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |c Added automatically, |d 2014. |f (dpSobek) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a Added automatically.
650        |a Vultures.
650        |a Buzzards.
720        |a Dr. Jerry Jackson.
773 0    |t Vultures 1
773 0    |t Vultures 2
830    0 |a dpSobek.
830    0 |a Everglades Digital Library: Reclaiming the Everglades.
830    0 |a With the Wild Things.
852        |a dpSobek |c Everglades Digital Library: Reclaiming the Everglades
856 40 |u http://dpanther.fiu.edu/dpService/dpPurlService/purl/FI14090849/00001 |y Electronic Resource
856 42 |3 FIU Helix Media Library |u http://libtube.fiu.edu/player?autostart=n&fullscreen=y&width=320&height=260&videoId=934&quality=hi&captions=n&chapterId=0 |y Vultures 1
856 42 |3 FIU Helix Media Library |u http://libtube.fiu.edu/player?autostart=n&fullscreen=y&width=320&height=260&videoId=936&quality=hi&captions=n&chapterId=0 |y Vultures 2
997        |a Everglades Digital Library: Reclaiming the Everglades


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