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The turkey vulture (Cathartes aura) is the most widespread of the New World vultures. [2] One of three species in the genus Cathartes of the family Cathartidae, the turkey vulture ranges from southern Canada to the southernmost tip of South America. It inhabits a variety of open and semi-open areas, including subtropical forests, shrublands ...
Turkey vultures coming in to the same roost they use for the season. All Cathartes species have featherless heads with brightly colored skin, yellow to orange in the yellow-headed vultures, bright red in the turkey vulture. All three species share a well-developed sense of smell, which is rare in birds, that enables them to locate carrion under ...
They’re also not a cross between a turkey and a vulture, they’re a type of vulture. Buzzards, scientifically known as black or turkey vultures, on a light pole. “They’re no more similar ...
National emblem of Turkey. Turkish copyright law is documented in the law number 5846 on Intellectual and Artistic Works (Turkish: Fikir ve Sanat Eserleri Kanunu). Turkey is revising its intellectual property rights laws in order to align them with WIPO standards. [1] Turkiye is a party to the Berne Convention, the Rome Convention and the TRIPS ...
The turkey vultures we see in Wisconsin are migratory. They spend the winter in the southern U.S. or even, as documented in at least one bird tagged in work by Hartman and Mossman, in South America.
The terms "copy" and "publish" are quite broad. They include copying in electronic form, the making of translated versions, the creation of a television program based on the work, and putting the work on the Internet. A work is protected by copyright if it is a literary or artistic work.
In 2025, the works unbound from copyright cap off the 1920s with literature, characters and more from 1929 entering the public domain.
Turkey vulture, Trinidad. Order: Cathartiformes Family: Cathartidae. The New World vultures are not closely related to Old World vultures, but superficially resemble them because of convergent evolution. Like the Old World vultures, they are scavengers.