Assessor: Melissa Whitecross
This species is Critically Endangered as it is declining at a rapid rate due to several threats of food source reduction, habitat loss, poisoning, and exploitation for the international trade in raptors (BirdLife International, 2022). In 2005, individuals of this species were confiscated (BirdLife International, 2022). Evidence of exploitation of this species in KwaZulu-Natal exists (McKean et al. 2013), however, the distribution of this species across its range is largely confined to protected areas, thus reducing the risk of direct harvesting to some extent (Murn et al. 2016).
References:
BirdLife International (2022) Species factsheet: Trigonoceps occipitalis. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 29/05/2022.
McKean, S., Mander, M., Diederichs, N., Ntuli, L., Mavundla, K., Williams, V. and Wakelin, J., 2013. The impact of traditional use on vultures in South Africa. Vulture News, 65, pp.15-36.
Murn, C., Mundy, P., Virani, M.Z., Borello, W.D., Holloway, G.J. and Thiollay, J.M., 2016. Using Africa's protected area network to estimate the global population of a threatened and declining species: a case study of the Critically Endangered White‐headed Vulture Trigonoceps occipitalis. Ecology and evolution, 6(4), pp.1092-1103.
The current population estimate for South Africa's White-headed Vulture population is less than 200 individuals with roughly 80 breeding pairs (Murn et al. 2013). This population is almost completely confined to the protected areas in the lowveld on the north-eastern boundary of South Africa (Murn et al. 2013).
References:
Murn, C., Combrink, L., Ronaldson, G.S., Thompson, C. and Botha, A., 2013. Population estimates of three vulture species in Kruger National Park, South Africa. Ostrich, 84(1), pp.1-9.
No breeding records have ever been reported outside of protected areas suggesting that this species is particularly sensitive to human disturbance (Murn et al. 2016). Breeding rates are slow and the fragmented nature of the current White-headed Vulutre population is likely to contribute to decreased breeding attempts (Murn et al. 2016).
References:
Murn, C., Mundy, P., Virani, M.Z., Borello, W.D., Holloway, G.J. and Thiollay, J.M., 2016. Using Africa's protected area network to estimate the global population of a threatened and declining species: a case study of the Critically Endangered White‐headed Vulture Trigonoceps occipitalis. Ecology and evolution, 6(4), pp.1092-1103.