gypaetus barbatus การใช้
- In Hebrew ( ), it is the name of the bird species " Gypaetus barbatus " ( lammergeier ).
- The major wildlife is lammergeier ( Gypaetus barbatus ) which are often seen squatting in large groups beside the road.
- Other fauna associated with the site included the now rare lammergeyer or bearded vulture ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ).
- The Egyptian vulture ( " Neophron percnopterus " ) and the lammergeier ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ) are true carrion-eating vultures.
- Bearded vultures ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ), that must have occupied the site during Neanderthal's absence accumulated a high percentage of the chamois bones and to a lower degree those of ibex.
- There are many protected animal species, like the Capercaillie, the Lammergeier ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ), the Cantabrian brown bear and the Iberian Wolf ( " Canis lupus signatus " ).
- Among the 130 species of birds are the griffon vulture ( " Gyps fulvus " ) and the golden eagle ( " Aquila chrysaetos " ), as well as the bearded vulture ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ) in the process of repopulation.
- There are three endangered species, the Maloti Minnow ( Maluti redfin, " Pseudobarbus quathlambae " ), a critically endangered species of fish found only in the Park, and the Cape Vulture ( " Gyps coprotheres " ) and Bearded Vultures ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ).
- The lammergeier ( " Gypaetus barbatus " ) is an aberrant cousin of the Old World vultures that has maintained strong feet in order to carry and drop large bones in order to crack them open to feed on bone marrow, their primary food, a technique they also sometimes use for live prey items, like tortoises.
- Out of 66 species of "'birds "'listed in the Red Book, 15 can be met in Shvanidzor, which are " Acciper Brevipes, Circaetus gallicus gallicus, Aquila rapax orientalis, Aquila chrysaetos fulva, Gypaetus barbatus aereus, Gyps fulvus fulvus, Merops superciliosus persicus, Sylvia hortensis crassirostris, Oenanthe xanthoprimna chrysopygia, Monticola saxalitis saxalitis, Luscinia svecica occidentalis, Remiz pendulinus menzbieri, Parus lugubris ."