SPRING PROMO CODES
SPEND £50 GET £5 OFF : "WHAA - 04020" - SPEND £150 GET £20 OFF : "WHAB - 20240"
ENTER CODES AT CHECKOUT
Shipping: GBP £8.61 Worldwide shipping fee.

1998Fauna of Bosnia and Herzegovina - White-headed Vulture - Set

Set
GBP £0.31
Official Price Guaranteed
(item in basket)
Other products in issue
Set
GBP £0.31
First Day Cover
GBP £0.62
Maxi Cards
GBP £0.62
Full sheets
GBP £9.33
Technical details
  • 16.11.1998
  • Ivica Šiško
  • -
  • Zrinski d.d. Čakovec
  • -
  • -
  • 25.56 x 35.56 mm
  • 2.40 kn - 0.70 BAM
Thematics
About Fauna of Bosnia and Herzegovina - White-headed Vulture

The white-headed vulture (Gyps fulvus HABLIZL) belongs to the species of birds of prey, the hawk family. The bird was mentioned as early as the ancient times. It was given some godlike attributes by the ancient people. By its ability to adapt, the bird has survived through millenniums as a species, but it belongs to an endangered species today and its survival is questionable. The reasons are many: besides the global pollution of the environment and poisoned wolf traps, or organized hunting grounds that are daily increasing in number, there is also a decrease in the breeding of sheep and other animals in open spaces. In order to survive in the new conditions of a shortage of food (they, namely, feed on carrion of dead animals), they have developed a more flexible organization of the survival of their community. As the perishing of animals does not follow in a regular order, the birds roam their territory looking for food, so that one bird is often distanced from the other approximately one kilometre. The vultures have acute vision, and while looking for food they can spot another vulture at the distance of 10 kilometres. When one of them spots a carrion it starts wheeling and circling above it, which is a clear sign for the other vultures to join it. In those years when there is not enough food, these birds do not nest and do not lay eggs. One of the four species of vultures still live in Europe. Vultures have become extinct in many countries, but there are still some felt in Spain and Greece, in Croatia in their colonies on the island Cres and the islands in the Kvarner gulf, where there is an attempt in progress to increase their population by artificially bred birds. Unfortunately, the birds have become extinct in their three habitats in Herzegovina, at the river source of the Buna in Blagaj, the Neretva canion near Žitomislić and the mountain Hrgud near Stolac, all owing to some careless ecological incidents. The most endangered birds are the young vultures who, until they reach their sexual maturity, roam the rugged rocks from Austria In the north to Africa in the south, and only a small number will return to their original home colony.

[read more]