Banner

He captured dozens of vultures in a photograph that looks like a painting

01.08.2017

Being close to a flock of more than 100 vultures is a moment difficult to forget. Carlos Rio, a Portuguese wildlife photographer, told Wilder the story behind this photo that looks like a painting.

 

 

 

This picture was taken last year in November in Buseu, a little abandoned village that has been recovered by the Buseu Project, a conservation programme for necrophage birds in pre-Pyrenees (Catalonia). There’s a ringing station and a vulture feeding station there.

“All the birds in this photo are griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus). That day the flock would have more than one hundred”, said Carlos Rio.

His goal for that day back in November was to photograph bearded vultures (Gypaetus barbatus) in flight. Carlos Rio wanted to “complete a series of photos for the book I would publish later on, Aves Necrófagas da Península Ibérica” (Necrophage Birds of the Iberia Peninsula).

That would be a perfect spot to achieve that. In that location, says Carlos Rio, “one can also photograph bearded vultures, Egyptian vultures (Neophron percnopterus) and the black vulture (Aegypius monachus). The golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) is also a frequent visitor!”

But, as it happened, the huge griffon vultures flock was the first to arrive at the feeding station. “In this photo, I’ve captured the moment when the flock took off, as if startled by some reason I couldn’t identify. A few minutes later the vultures returned to the same spot.”

Carlos Rio is a Portuguese professional wildlife photographer and a birdwatching guide in the Parque Natural do Litoral Norte (Natural Park of the North Coast), in Fão-Esposende region.

Helena Geraldes

Sou jornalista de Natureza na revista Wilder. Escrevo sobre Ambiente e Biodiversidade desde 1998 e trabalhei nas redacções da revista Fórum Ambiente e do jornal PÚBLICO. Neste último estive 13 anos à frente do site de Ambiente deste diário, o Ecosfera. Em 2015 lancei a Wilder, com as minhas colegas jornalistas Inês Sequeira e Joana Bourgard, para dar voz a quem se dedica a proteger ou a estudar a natureza mas também às espécies raras, ameaçadas ou àquelas de que (quase) ninguém fala. Na verdade, isso é algo que quero fazer desde que ainda em criança vi um documentário de vida selvagem que passava aos domingos na televisão e que me fez decidir o rumo que queria seguir. Já lá vão uns anos, portanto. Desde então tenho-me dedicado a escrever sobre linces, morcegos, abutres, peixes mas também sobre conservacionistas e cidadãos apaixonados pela natureza, que querem fazer parte de uma comunidade. Trabalho todos os dias para que a Wilder seja esse lugar no mundo.

Don't Miss