Somewhere in Mongolia, in mountainous terrain, we were looking for rock thrushes. Above our heads from time to time representatives of raptors appeared: a bearded vulture, cinereous vulture, griffon vulture, steppe eagle, golden eagle. I chose a place, organized a bait site and decided to sit down under small trees in a camouflage tent an hour before the dawn. Magpies and a raven appeared first, and sometimes at the bait site there were 6 black kites. A cinereous vulture appeared twice but it did not decide to have a meal and flew away. At about 10 o’clock our guide arrived and scared away all the birds which had appeared so far. I thought that he’d better had an important reason. And he had one. During the night in our farmer’s herd a foal dropped dead. According to Mongolian tradition the carcass must be removed from the close vicinity of the yurt, as it is hard to talk about a farm, as in Mongolia there are no fences or clearly separated territories belonging to one nomad. Everyone receives 0.7 ha from the government, grazing animals is unlimited and each man grazes their herd (an average herd can number a thousand – horses, yaks, camels, goats or sheep) where they want to. Foreigners don’t have the right to buy land. Each year there are many such incidents like the one that affected our host that night, among 55 million animals grazed freely in Mongolia. This is also the reason why there are so large populations of cinereous vultures, griffon vultures, steppe eagles and black kites. It was confirmed already within an hour from the moment we moved away from the car. Suddenly 6 vultures appeared. Initially I thought that four of them were griffon vultures and two of them cinereous vultures. However two griffon vultures, which were much more aggressive than the rest of birds, appeared to be Himalayan vultures. One of them, although it was a cripple (without one leg), once it scared away all the rest of birds, sat down to eat vigorously. An amazing, strong bird tearing the foal’s skin apart. It swallowed quite large pieces of meat and skin. When it satisfied its hunger, it flew away immediately, and its place was taken by griffon vultures.
Link to the slide show - Vultures - click here
Body
Mongolia - introductory text - Pallas's sandgrouse
Birds-new galleries:
1. Pallas's Sandgrouse (T,V),2.Himalayan Vulture (T)3.Pallas's Sea-Eagle.(T)4.Demoiselle Crane(T).5.Upland Buzzard (T). 6.Siberian Scoter (T).7.Rufous-tailed Rock-Thrush (T).8.Saker falcon.9.Golden Eagle.10.Azure Tit (T,V).11.Horned Lark (T,V).12.Red-billed Chough (T,V).13.Mongolian Lark (T).14.Mongolian Herring Gull (T,G).15.Bar-headed Goose (T, V).16.Amur Falcon (T,V).17.Rock Sparrow (T,V).18.Pine Bunting (T,V).19.Desert Wheatear (T,V).20. Merlin (T).21.Isabelline Shrike (T).22.White-crowned Penduline-Tit (T,V). 23.Oriental plover (T). 24.Citrine wagtail (T). 25.Greater Sand Plover (T).26.Red-crested pochard (T).27.Daurian redstart (T).28.Eastern marsh harrier (T).29.Swan Goose (T).30.Dusky Warbler.31.Taiga Flycatcher.32.Pacific Swift.33.Thick-billed warbler. 34.Asian brown flycatcher.35.Daurian jackdaw.36. Richard's Pipit. 37.Garganey. 38..Asian Short-toed Lark.
Mamals-new galleries:
1. Przewalski's Horse (T). 2.Long-tailed ground squirrel (T,V). 3.Mongolian gazelle (T).4. Corsac fox (T).5.Bactrian camel (T).6.Yak (T).7.Bobak Marmot (T).8.Mongolian Pika.
Reptile-new galleries:
1. Variegated toadhead agama. 2. Steppes Ratsnakes (T).
Amphibian : Mongolian toad
Changes in birds galleries:
1.Cinereous Vulture (T) 2.Black Kite (T,V).3.Buff-browed Warbler(T,G).4.Olive-backed Pipit (T,V).5.Litle Stint (T).6.Pallas's Grasshopper Warbler (T).7.Eurasian Hobby(T).8.Siberian Rubythroat (T,V).9.Carrion Crow (T,V).10.Pallas's Leaf Warbler (T).11.Black-winged Stilt. 12.Ruddy Shelduck (T).13.Kentish Plover (T).14.Grey Heron (T).15.Eurasian Hoopoe(T).16.Griffon vulture (T).17.Arctic Warbler.18.Common swift.19.Common Shelduck.20.Whooper swan.21.Bearded vulture(T).22.Steppe eagle.23. Horned grebe.24.White-winged Tern.25.Pied avocet. 26.Isabelline wheatear. 27.Ruddy turnstone.28.Cormorant. 29.Northern Wheatear.30.Common goldeneye.31.Common redshank. 32.Eurasian Tree Sparrow. 33.Eurasian skylark.
Go to the gallery: MONGOLIA - F A U N A MONGOLIA SLIDESHOW