Vultures of the Gulf Coast (2 Species)

Vultures are large birds of prey that normally have a head or neck that is often devoid of feathers. Due to their habits of feeding on carrion, they have gotten a bad reputation, however their ecological niche is valuable and they are quite interesting birds. There are two different vulture species that can be found on the Gulf Coast, known as Turkey Vultures and Black Vultures. Both can be found year round on the Gulf Coast.

Vultures of the Gulf Coast

Turkey Vulture

Turkey Vulture (Cape Hatteras National Seashore Photo)
Turkey Vulture in flight (Brad Sutton Photo)
Identification

The Turkey Vulture is a large brown bird with a pinkish head that is featherless. In flight, the trailing edge of the wings will show white feathers, with the rest of the underside of the bird being brown. Turkey Vulture will often be seen soaring overhead, or perched on cliffs or other tall structures. They can also be seen near roadsides feeding on carrion.

Range

In North America, Turkey Vultures can be seen in southern states and central America year round. They move into northern states and Southern Canada during the summer. Turkey Vultures can be found on the Gulf Coast year round.

Diet and Foraging Behavior

Turkey Vultures feed mostly on dead prey such as roadkill or carrion. It is said that Turkey Vultures will never attack live prey. They serve as a valuable “clean-up crew” in the ecosystems they inhabit.

Where to Find this Bird

Look for Turkey Vultures soaring overhead or perching up on high structures such as signs, power lines, cliffs, or tall trees. They will often roost or feed in groups. Also keep an eye out for these birds feeding in open areas or roadsides.

Black Vulture

Black Vulture (Dennis Jarvis Photo – CC by 2.0)
Black Vulture in flight (cuatrok77 photo – CC by 2.0)
Identification

Black Vultures look similar to turkey vultures except they have an all black head and appear to have white/gray wingtips when viewed from below, as opposed to white on the trailing wing edge, among other features.

Learn how to differentiate Black Vultures from Turkey Vultures
Range

The Black Vulture can be found in many southern and southeastern states in the U.S. as well as in Central America. They are often seen as vagrants in more northern states in the U.S. In the Gulf Coast, they can be found year round and are common.

Diet and Foraging Behavior

Much like the Turkey Vulture, Black Vultures will feed on roadkill and carrion, often large mammals. However, unlike the Turkey Vulture, they have also been known to eat weak, or dying live prey.

Where to Find this Bird

Black Vultures can be seen soaring overhead, or perched on powerlines, snags, cliffs, or on other tall structures. They can also sometimes be seen in mixed groups of other raptors such as Turkey Vultures.

Which of these species have you seen? Leave a comment below and thanks for reading!

2 thoughts on “Vultures of the Gulf Coast (2 Species)”

  1. Hi, Guys,

    I love your YouTube channel and the info and enthusiasm you impart. As an older (65+) woman who came to birding recently your forays have changed my approach!

    HOWEVER! I’ve recently gotten many, many of the same email about vultures with different state/region in the title. I deleted bunches of them yesterday and today there is a whole bunch more. I hope this is a glitch and you can make it stop and refrain from not replicating with other species in the future.

    I’m off to delete more emails now…

    Respectfully, Jenni Ford

    Sent from my iPad

    >

    Like

    1. Hey, Jenni! We’re trying to create content for people in different states who would like to know about the birds in their state. Did not realize it was emailing our subscribers every time we made a new post! So sorry about that! We’ll see what we can do about it not sending notifications every time.

      Like

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