After Sunchica’s second rescue, rehabilitation and release, the Griffon Vulture travelled far and wide. Sunchica left the Balkans and reached the Middle East where she spent the winter months. Now, after five months, the vulture is back home! We have been closely following her movements and behaviour thanks to the GPS tag on her back that also helps reinforce our anti-poisoning efforts.
Sunchica becomes part of anti-poisoning efforts
At the beginning of October 2019, a peculiar sight struck the residents of the small city of Berovo, in the Republic of North Macedonia, when a juvenile Griffon Vulture wandered into their neighbourhood seemingly healthy but unable to fly away. The event mobilized the animal welfare activists Pro-Anima Berovo as well as the Macedonian Ecological Society (MES) who immediately took action to catch the bird and save it from neighbourhood dogs. They then transferred Sunchica to the city centre to enter Skopje Zoo, where they realised the vulture was hungry and exhausted, so she was looked after and rehabilitated. By the end of October, the vulture was fit again and was released by MES in Vitachevo. From there, she began flying east.
That’s when the Fund for Wild Fauna and Flora (FWFF) tagged Sunchica as well as several other Griffon Vultures with GPS tags within the Balkan Anti-Poisoning Project Small Grants Programme led by the Vulture Conservation Foundation (VCF) and funded by the MAVA Foundation, with hopes to track poisoning incidents in the Balkans, which continues to cause adverse impacts on vulture populations. Unfortunately, by mid-November, conservationists detected that she was in trouble and captured her near Lake Vistonida in Greece. Once again, she was found in an exhausted state due to her inability to find food. After being transported to a veterinary centre in Thessaloniki, she made a recovery and was released again at Dadia in December 2019!
Sunchica’s carries out fascinating travels
Ever since her second release, it has been exciting to monitor the impressive travels the vulture embarked upon. Up until October 2020, the Griffon Vulture had been circling the Eastern Rhodopes and Central Balkan. Sunchica then began to fly east towards the Black Sea and following the coast. Crossing Turkey and Iraq, she reached Iran by late November. Now, after 5 months, Sunchica has returned to the Balkans and can be seen flying through the skies of western Bulgaria!
Since October 2020, Sunchica has flown 18,732 km! Her starting position and the area where she spent most of the wintertime extends to a distance of 2,800 km. What makes this trip even more impressive is that it was the young vulture’s first long-distance journey! The ongoing monitoring efforts of the vulture are possible thanks to the BalkanDetox LIFE project. In an innovative initiative, the project foresees to monitor all Griffon Vulture colonies in the Balkans to effectively track and prevent mass poisonings incidents of the species and other scavenging animals, as they would also act as sentinel species. To achieve this, the project needs to equip 25 Griffon Vultures with GPS transmitters and at the same time collaborate with different projects that tag Balkan vultures to utilize their data.