The white vulture, which is rare in the world, reached Adyodhya from Pokhara and returned to Pokhara from there
The world's rarest white vulture, which went in search of food, reached Ayodhya in India and returned to Pokhara. Krishna Prasad Bhusal, a vulture researcher, said that while monitoring the satellite-tagged vultures, they stayed for three days by the Ghanghra river that flows through Ayodhya and returned to Pokhara.
Bhusal, a vulture expert who is researching the white vultures of Nepal, installed satellite tags on five vultures on October 2nd. A white vulture has been caught and tagged at Lamial and Dobilla dumping side of Pokhara. Three adults (4 to 5 years), one juvenile (3 years) and one juvenile (2 years) vultures were tagged . One of these adult vultures flew about 250 km from Pokhara and reached Ayodhya on 14th of Kartik, he said.
The vulture reached the vulture restaurant near Gaidhwa lake in Rupandehi from Pokhara on the first day. The next day stayed around Lumbini . On the third day, near Balrampur, India, it reached a place where cows are plentiful and stayed there for 5 days . After that, he said that the vulture returned to Pokhara after spending 3 days around Ghanghra river in Ayodhya.
While coming to Pokhara, the vulture that flew from Ayodhya in the morning stayed in the Rajapani community forest of Kapilvastu and the next day it reached Pokhara on the third day after staying at the butterfly market of Syangja. After wandering outside for two weeks, the vulture again reached Pokhara. It seems that the other four vultures are coming around from time to time," he said, "There is no long movement. They travel 20/30 km daily.' 
For the first time in Nepal and India, white vultures have been tagged to find out about the distance they travel in search of food, breeding places and migration conditions and challenges. Bhusal said that the tags were caught and tagged using leg hole traps with permission from the National Parks and Wildlife Department. A satellite tag worth 2 lakhs is 30 grams. The data comes in two hours from the satellite connection. All the data about how high and fast it is flying can be found from this,' he said, 'The study is easy as the information about whether the battery is working/not charging/is not charging.'
3 Bhusal himself is an expert in installing satellite tags with a lifespan of up to 5 years. Under his leadership, Bulgarian expert Dr. Vladimir Dobre and a team of conservationist Dmitry Cherneva, vulture experts Ankitvilas Joshi and Ishwari Chaudhary fitted the satellite tags . It has been three months since the tag was applied. Not much movement of vultures has been seen. It seems that the vulture that went to Ayodhya also went for food," vulture expert Joshi said, "now its breeding season is coming. You can learn something new at this time.'
in what place and how to apply good ? He said that if you can get information about how the chicks are raised and what are the problems, it will help to make a plan for conservation. This vulture, which gives birth to only one child, makes a nest in January and nests in February/Chait until June. It is estimated that the number of rare white vultures in Nepal is between 300 and 1000. Experts estimate that half of this number is in Pokhara Valley. Its weight is from two to three kg . Even earlier, the rare Dungar vulture reached Pakistan through different places of Himachal Pradesh in search of food and mate.
traveled 1100 km from Pitholi in Nawalparasi in 2018 and reached the border of India and Pakistan. The vulture is a large carnivorous bird belonging to the group of birds of prey. It feeds on dead animals without hunting itself. Vultures are also known as 'nature's scoundrels' as they play an important role in reducing the odor of the environment by eating waste and discarded meat.
