How is the camel described by the vulture?
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
he asked. “There is a desert some miles away.” said the vulture. “I was flying over it when I saw a lone camel not far away. It looked big and fat.” Page 2 The lion looked at his other advisers.
Answer:
Hello
Explanation:
India’s three vulture species saw an unprecedented decline of 97 to 99.9 percent between 1992 and 2007 owing to ingesting diclofenac through cattle carcasses.
The near extinction of this efficient scavenger is linked to spread of zoonotic diseases and increased incidence of rabies.
A survey published in December 2017 shows that vulture declines have slowed, though at very low level, across India, Nepal and Pakistan.
The crisis is however far from over with other veterinary drugs toxic to vultures still in use.
With the vulture, it was the tragedy of the commons. Once, these large, ungainly birds were ubiquitous – seen in both cities and countryside, perched on trees and electric poles, cliffs and housetops. They could usually be found hunched by the roadside, long, naked neck buried deep in the carcass of some unfortunate animal; or circling the sky in great numbers like a huge dark cloud.
There were so many that no one thought to count them; indeed they were too numerous to enumerate. A survey across 18 protected areas in India was extrapolated to estimate that in 1991-92 there were over 40 million vultures in India.