Black Vultures

beaglegun

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 7, 2021
Messages
379
Location
Kentucky
Found a new whitetail fawn stumbling across the road yesterday. Blood running out of each eye socket. Both eyeballs mangled. There are more of these now in KY then native buzzards. How is it possible that these invasive, non-native birds are protected????
 
I've had to run buzzards off a deer I shot before and there is a possibility one got ahold of a doe I killed in Alabama this year:

They are hell on fawns and calves. KFB has a depredation program if they're hassling your livestock but, unfortunately, you're probably on your own as far as deer fawns:

And before someone comes in with the S-S-S method: don't do Federal crimes and talk about it on the internet.
 
And before someone comes in with the S-S-S method: don't do Federal crimes and talk about it on the internet.
A friend of a friend in Alabama got six dep tags, like it would make a difference or something. Went on to shoot as many as he could and ran straight to facebook.

Jail. Straight to jail.
 
These invasive, non-native vultures appeared from nowhere and took over. Absolutely no common sense reason for them to be protected!!! They are affecting native turkey vultures. I've seen 20 in a tree waiting for a calf to drop!! You can kill as many groundhogs and coyotes and rat snakes as you want but you cant kill a black vulture???
 
Not that I particularly like these birds but an animal expanding its range without human introduction isn't invasive. Like armadillos in the midwest or moose in the great basin and southern rockies, it's a new thing for the area but not invasive.
 

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