Ingestion of man-made items by birds can reduce stomach volume and block the digestive track. In southern Africa, microtrash within the regurgitation of Cape Vulture nestlings was last documented in 1983. We present evidence of nestling microtrash ingestion after a 30-year gap. Vulture nestlings were captured at a breeding colony in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. One nestling regurgitated three microtrash fragments. Two pieces of microtrash were collected from the nest of another nestling. Neither nestling appeared to have skeletal deformities or feather stress bars. Our results highlight the persistence of microtrash ingestion by Cape Vulture nestlings, which could impact the species negatively.
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1 April 2017
Observations of Microtrash Ingestion in Cape Vultures in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
Morgan B Pfeiffer,
Jan A Venter,
Colleen T Downs
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African Zoology
Vol. 52 • No. 1
April 2017
Vol. 52 • No. 1
April 2017
conservation
nestling
trash
vulture