Carrion crows, large gulls, hawks and herons all receive severe punishment. |
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Carrion Crow nests are conspicuous and we were able to observe birds delivering food to nestlings using spotting scopes. |
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Carrion is laid out to attract the feathered carnivores, and regular diners include whitenecked ravens, lanner falcons, jackal buzzards, black eagles and cape vultures. |
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During his remarks, Carrion recalled how he started out as a school teacher and urban planner in the Bronx. |
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Scliar's narrator describes how Carrion has blood extracted from a verruga peruana lesion injected into the researcher's own body. |
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Primarily a carnivore the wolverine captures most of its prey, though it is also an extensive scavenger, eating quantities of carrion. |
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Marine toads have the distinction of being one of the only known amphibians to eat plant matter and carrion as adults. |
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The colour scheme is muted but for vivid splashes of red, with most shots dominated by looming shadows, towers or circling carrion crows. |
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The side-blotched lizard, and the carrion crow are among the animals revealed by researchers to possess a social behavior. |
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This is the hooded crow, which is only a carrion crow, at least as far as bird scientists are concerned. |
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During my last visit to the Ethiopian highlands, I watched as huge flesh-eating carrion crows circled the parched crop fields. |
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Even the hog-nosed skunk, which digs for most of its food, will eat fruits and carrion on occasion. |
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Because frilled sharks live on the ocean floor, they may also feed on carrion floating down from the surface. |
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They are carnivorous, scavenging among carrion or preying on other molluscs. |
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Although they scavenge less often than Bald Eagles, they will eat carrion of deer and elk, especially in winter. |
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This dung or carrion mimicry attracts flesh flies, rove beetles, and even mosquitoes, all of which have been observed with pollen on them. |
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They've become almost as common as carrion crows and are killing not only game birds but many waders. |
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Urban-living carrion crows have learned to use road traffic for cracking tough nuts. |
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Every few minutes the growl of a giant UN Hercules transport plane scatters coal-black carrion crows from the trees. |
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Reintroduction of this carrion beetle continues on Nantucket Island, off the coast of Massachusetts. |
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A survey of fox dens showed that the vast majority of lamb carcasses found in them were carrion ie. dead before being taken by the fox. |
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Instead, he believes Rugops was a scavenger, using its head to pick at carrion rather than fighting other animals for food. |
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Despite their fearsome size, these magnificent birds survive mainly on carrion and hunting small mammals like mice. |
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Among the most conspicuous of the first colonisers at Mount St Helens was the common raven, known to eat almost anything, including carrion. |
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Some observers have suggested that carrion on train tracks actually aids overall eagle survival by providing fledglings with a ready food supply. |
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Biologists, however, have reported some bees taking advantage of other resources, such as animal droppings and carrion. |
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Shrieks rent the air as another crow spiraled down to invade the feast, some carrion invisible from the roadside. |
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The large monitor lizards have a more varied diet and will eat eggs, birds, small animals and carrion. |
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Badgers will kill carrion and have been know to take lambs but the ones they tend to go for are those on their last legs. |
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Diversionary feeding involves leaving dead rats and other carrion on the moor for the harriers to eat. |
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Yet their scavenging clears up immense quantities of carrion, and we should be grateful, if not admiring. |
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After I pass, I see it in the rear view mirror, settling on carrion back along the shoulder. |
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As well as carrion, harriers will eat the young of pukekos and ducks, and prey upon rodents found in fields. |
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As they soar over foraging areas, they scan the ground, searching for carrion or scavengers that might signal the presence of something dead. |
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Western Gulls are omnivores and eat a variety of things including fish and other aquatic creatures, eggs, carrion, garbage, and other birds. |
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Each occasion a large gull or carrion crow passed overhead, the buntings took all wing, providing a most impressive spectacle. |
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They scavenge for carrion and garbage and also prey on rodents and on the eggs and nestlings of other birds. |
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As they continue on the road, the sky is filled with carrion birds and wolves feed on the bodies of unburied orcs. |
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They eat fish, mammals, birds, bats, invertebrates, carrion and some fruit. |
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They are often seen soaring in search of carrion, but their diet also includes young goats and lambs. |
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Until the mating season, they live in the forest eating fallen leaves, berries and carrion. |
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They have also been known to steal prey from other raptors and to eat fresh carrion. |
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They may steal prey from other raptors, and have been known to eat carrion as long as it has not been dead too long. |
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Disturbance after eggs are laid provides opportunities for predation by carrion crows, jays, kestrels, magpies, foxes and mink. |
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They probably need at least helms, to protect them from mobs of carrion birds, and mail on their bellies to cover ground-to-air arrows. |
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But just then a carrion crow swooped down and took one of the ducklings. |
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Although she applied a fresh astringent of sanicle when she changed my bandages, the carrion trapped in the dewclaw infected the wound and it healed badly. |
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When the bison slaughter rose to its height, wolves and other scavengers thrived on the availability of carrion, and wolf numbers probably spiked briefly. |
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In this species, both parents provision their offspring predigested carrion from a vertebrate carcass, and the larvae beg for food from their parents. |
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Adding to its standard diet of insects, berries, bird eggs, and occasional scraps of carrion, the pup increases its protein intake by hunting mice, voles, and lemmings. |
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Bears like berries, nuts, grasses, carrion, insects and birdseed. |
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Their diet includes fish, smaller birds, carrion, and refuse. |
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It lives mainly on carrion, but farmers and gamekeepers shot, trapped and poisoned the bird because they believed it might endanger breeding grouse. |
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Endris Abtu often watches the huge flesh-eating carrion crows circling over the parched crop fields and distant hilltops around his village in south Wollo. |
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Perhaps the Purple Emperor is feasting, as Morris says, upon a mass of putrid carrion at the base of an oak tree. |
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Additionally, as carrion, reindeer may be scavenged opportunistically by foxes, hawks and ravens. |
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Crocodiles are also known to be aggressive scavengers who feed upon carrion and steal from other predators. |
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Each year Dave Pooler and his gamekeeping team at the Rhug estate, Corwen, will trap and shoot an average of 800 carrion crows. |
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The main diet of deep sea benthic fish is invertebrates of the deep sea benthos and carrion. |
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In times of scarcity, wolves readily eat carrion, visiting cattle burial grounds and slaughter houses. |
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It feeds primarily on large ungulates, though it also eats smaller animals, livestock, carrion, and garbage. |
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Regardless of carrion access, or animal size, the putrification stage attracted the largest abundance and diversity of insects. |
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Arctic foxes generally eat any small animal they can find, including lemmings, voles, other rodents, hares, birds, eggs, fish, and carrion. |
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In a move reminiscent of the Bacchants descending on Pentheus, the villagers emerge from the alleys like scavengers circling for carrion. |
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It also eats carrion, berries, seaweed, and insects and other small invertebrates. |
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Second, during transects we also regularly encountered desert iguanas which occasionally scavenge carrion. |
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The diet consists mainly of earthworms, large insects, small mammals, carrion, cereals and root tubers. |
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They typically only feed on carrion in the late evening hours and at night. |
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On the contrary, in Katmai National Park and Preserve, wolves, even lone wolves, may manage to displace brown bears at carrion sites. |
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Because they are scavengers in a semiarid ecosystem where carrion is often limited, brown hyenas naturally occur in small numbers. |
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This fulmar will feed on shrimp, fish, squid, plankton, jellyfish, and carrion, as well as refuse. |
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Paul Barrett proposed that prosauropods supplemented their herbivorous diets with small prey or carrion. |
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Many species of gull will feed on seabird and sea mammal carrion when the opportunity arises, as will giant petrels. |
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Unlike the stoat and weasel, the polecat readily eats carrion, including that of large ungulates. |
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Most also eat carrion, at least occasionally, and vultures and condors eat carrion as their main food source. |
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In the United Kingdom, red kites were ubiquitous scavengers that lived on carrion and rubbish. |
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It feeds on a wide variety of carrion including sheep carcasses and dead game birds. |
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The diet of the pine marten includes small mammals, carrion, birds, insects, and fruits. |
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They have small rounded, highly sensitive ears and sharp teeth adapted for eating small mammals, birds, insects, frogs, and carrion. |
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Its light glimmered on the river and on the wings of carrion fowl awheel overhead. |
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During winter in Scotland, golden eagles soar frequently in order to scan the environment for carrion. |
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He hath forbidden you only carrion, and blood, and swineflesh, and that which hath been immolated to any other than Allah. |
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Earthworms are their most important food source, followed by large insects, carrion, cereals, fruit and small mammals including rabbits, mice, shrews, moles and hedgehogs. |
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Prohibited foods include pork products, blood, carrion, and alcohol. |
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In many cases, this important food source is obtained as carrion. |
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Other photos of dingoes feeding attest to the variety in their diet, from small mammals, fish, and carrion, to fruit such as mango, coconut and pandanus. |
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