Abstract

Experimental and observational evidence from a 5-year study of a partially marked population of black vultures, Coragyps atratus, suggests that individuals can find food by following others from overnight roosting groups. Natural food sources usually lasted long enough for recruitment to occur. Black vultures formed larger roosting groups and had enhanced second-day recruitment during winter, when their main food source was least abundant. Successful foragers returned to experimental food sources on subsequent days and generally preceded new arrivals. Arrivals at bait were clumped on days of discovery and second days, but incoming groups were larger on second days and highly skewed towards early arrivals. In general, adults arrived at baited sites earlier than young adults and juveniles. During natural roost departures, adults were as likely to depart at the head of departing groups as at the rear, while young were concentrated in the rear. Birds removed experimentally from the population long enough to be naive about the location of food followed others from the roost when reintroduced. Control adults (birds caught and handled but not restrained for long) were not concentrated in the rear of roost-departing groups, as were experimental adults. Juveniles tended to follow regardless of recent experience. These results suggest that roost attendance facilitates foraging for black vultures; these roosts probably function as information centres.

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