Vultures have been held in twisted fascination throughout history. Their association with death may be a practical necessity for them, but the human world has always sought a more mystical connection—making these birds the bridge between the realms of the living and the dead.

The animal world, however, has always found itself at odds with human perception—whether it’s considering the innocent aye-aye as a “harbinger of death” or deifying the greater short-horned lizard for shooting blood to protect itself.

So it is with the vulture, whose association with death and decay meant that its own dwindling numbers attracted little attention—until an alarming number of human lives were lost.

Their near-extinction across the Indian subcontinent triggered a catastrophic chain reaction—escalating the spread of deadly diseases, fostering an explosion of scavengers and ultimately causing a public health emergency.

It All Started When The ‘Messengers Of Death’ Began To Die

Until the last decade of the 20th century, the Indian subcontinent’s skies were teeming with vultures.

Three species dominated these skies—the long-billed (Gyps indicus), the slender-billed (Gyps tenuirostris) and the white-rumped vulture (Gyps bengalensis).

With an estimated 40 million individuals in India alone, these scavengers were a ubiquitous sight across cities and villages. From perched trees to sky-high spirals above carcasses, the vultures were indispensable to the subcontinent’s ecosystem.

By 2007, their numbers had plummeted by 97% to 99.9%, with the white-rumped vulture suffering the steepest decline. This catastrophic drop marked the fastest collapse of a bird population ever recorded around the world. While initially unnoticed, the decline became undeniable when researchers found alarming numbers of dead vultures in key habitats like the Keoladeo National Park.

Once described as the most populous raptor in the subcontinent, the white-rumped vulture was declared critically endangered in 2000. Today, the combined population of the Indian subcontinent’s three most affected vulture species hovers around a mere 20,000.

But What Doomed The Vultures?

The mystery of the vulture’s decline perplexed scientists for years. Speculations ranged from pesticide bioaccumulation to habitat destruction. However, the rapidity and scale of the decline suggested a more pervasive threat.

The breakthrough came in 2004, when researchers traced the cause to diclofenac, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) widely used in livestock.

Diclofenac, while effective at treating cattle ailments, proved deadly to vultures—even in trace amounts. Consuming the carcasses of treated animals exposed vultures to the drug, leading to fatal kidney failure and visceral gout. A single contaminated carcass could poison dozens of vultures, and by the time the link was discovered, the damage was irreversible.

In 2006, India and Pakistan banned the veterinary use of diclofenac. However, enforcement has been uneven, with human formulations of the drug illegally repurposed for livestock.

Efforts to replace diclofenac with meloxicam, a vulture-safe alternative, have shown promise, but other toxic veterinary drugs remain in circulation, threatening the recovery of vulture populations.

A World With Few Vultures Spelt Death For All

The vacuum left by vultures did not go unfilled. Their absence spurred an explosion in feral dog and rat populations, both far less efficient scavengers. Unlike vultures, whose strong stomach acids neutralize deadly bacteria, these scavengers became carriers of diseases, spreading them to humans.

In the decade following the vulture decline, rabies cases skyrocketed, with an estimated 47,300 human deaths attributed to dog bites between 1992 and 2006. Rabies vaccine sales and dog bite reports surged, reflecting the grim toll on public health.

Rotting carcasses also contaminated water supplies, spreading diseases like anthrax, tuberculosis and brucellosis. Researchers estimate that the loss of vultures caused over 100,000 additional human deaths annually between 2000 and 2005. This staggering toll, combined with the economic costs of disease outbreaks, was estimated at $70 billion per year.

In recent years, conservation efforts have provided glimmers of hope. Captive breeding programs, like the Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre, have successfully raised and released vultures into carefully monitored “vulture-safe zones.” The ban on large human-use diclofenac vials has also reduced illegal veterinary use.

Yet, challenges persist. Other toxic NSAIDs remain unregulated, and habitat destruction continues to threaten nesting sites. Vulture populations are stabilizing but remain precariously low.

The vulture crisis serves as a stark reminder of how deeply interconnected ecosystems are—and how easily they can unravel. The loss of a single species cascaded into public health emergencies, economic losses and human tragedy.

As vultures slowly claw their way back from the brink, their story underscores the urgent need for proactive conservation and thoughtful coexistence. In nature, even the least glamorous creatures can hold the key to our survival.

The story of the vultures exposes the sheer fragility of the natural world and how the best of our efforts may only be the first step on the road to recovery. Does the decline of healthy animal populations compound your fears of climate change? Take a quick 2-minute test to see where you stand on the Climate Change Worry Scale.

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