
A Turkey Vulture uses sight and smell to locate food
Whether it is due to global warming or as a result of increased roadkill, vultures circling overhead are becoming an increasingly common sight. Today I came across a lone Turkey Vulture feeding on a roadkill rabbit (below). Vultures cover a great deal of territory while searching for food, but how are they locating it? This brings about the age old debate of whether birds can actually smell?

As Turkey Vultures locate carcasses by smell, they tend to be smaller ones,
so that they can eat quickly and without hordes of other vultures around
Taste buds are poorly developed in birds, and number very few (less than 100) in comparison to humans (10,000), but nearly all birds have developed olfaction, or a sense of smell, though in many species it probably does not play an important role in their daily lives. Most birds rely upon sight as their primary sense, yet olfaction plays a minor role in raptors, as they have been observed discarding tainted meat.
While all birds can smell and use odors to a degree, the size of the olfactory lobes in the brain may dictate to what extent. The larger it is in relation to the size of the brain, the better the chances are that a species relies upon smell to detect their food. It is well developed in nocturnal birds such as kiwis and oilbirds, as well as emus, honeyguides, geese, the tube-noses (shearwaters, fulmars, storm-petrels, albatrosses), and the Turkey Vulture. This is not the case with the more aggressive Black Vulture which relies heavily upon sight and tends to follow the Turkey Vulture to food!

A large concentration of Black Vultures at a deer carcass. They either located it
by sight or followed descending Turkey Vultures to this food source. Being more
aggressive than Turkey Vultures they would have chased them away
all photos © adrian binns
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