California's scent is also poor, which helps their diet. When they find a meal, they often wear themselves at the point they need to rest several hours before taking off again. Vulture now has a sweat gland, so they use their own technology to try to cool themselves as it gets hot. They defecate with their own feet. "This may sound serious or strange to us, but it is actually a very effective way to keep it comfortable when the temperature is too high.
An important young turtle. Collecting vulture eggs from the wild for artificial hatching began in 1983 when eggs collected at the beginning of California Condor were received at the San Diego Zoo. Sisquoc was the first California Vulture hatched in the zoo on 30th March 1983, and it appeared from his shell. His incubation news caused a lot of mails from all over the world. Parents, zoos, governments, school classrooms, and many people sent letters of congratulations, and they all wanted to help the Condor project. In 1987, the last California vulture, wild animals called AC9 were brought to the park. Due to the extinction of wild species, half of the world's population lives in the park. On April 29, 1988, the first zoo keeper Vulture Molloko hatched, and the bald eagle protection reached a new highest value. In 1992, the first zoo keeper vulture was released to California 's native habitat in the national forest of Los Angeles.
Another historic birth in 2016 came from Pinnacle National Park, California. Wild California 's bald eagle was born and raised in the Pinnacles for the first time since the 1890' s. Like a one hundred day crane, the California Condor became the first list of endangered species in 1967 and has numerous protection programs. The chicks that grew up in Pinnacles is just one of the vulture groups born this wild in the wild. More California vultures grew in the wild, not the first wild in 50 years. We can even see the hatch on the camera. This means that the population of our wild vultures is increasing. This is an important step to recovery. This year vulture finally won the last item, and the population of California's wild vultures has reached 150 - this is the goal of population recovery. Many factors are considered when assessing the recovery of endangered species, but exceeding the population threshold is a basic milestone.