Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Europe's largest vulture returns to Bulgaria's Eastern Rhodopes

Black Vulture
Photo: Green Balkans Wildlife Rescue Centre

Black Vultures, the largest and heaviest birds of prey in Europe, have returned to the Eastern Rhodopes after 14 birds were released from Spain at the end of last week, reports BNR Kardzhali. A team from the Bulgarian Society for the Protection of Birds, the Spanish NGO GREFA and the Rewilding Rhodopes Foundation released the first flock of vultures in the Eastern Rhodopes as part of a recovery program in the Bulgarian section of the mountain. After 6 months of adaptation in a specially built aviary between the towns of Madzharovo and Ivaylovgrad, the black vultures were released. The ecologists monitor them closely to make sure that their adaptation is going smoothly.

The plan is to release 6-10 individuals per year in the coming years. If a colony of Black Vultures is established in Bulgaria, this will contribute to the survival of the species in the Balkans. They are expected to establish contacts with the last surviving local colony of about 25-30 pairs in the Greek part of the Rhodope Mountains, as well as with newly formed colonies of the species in the Balkan Mountains.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Photos: Marti Dimov/Facebook

It will take half a century to restore the forests destroyed by the wildfires

More than 4 , 500 of woodland in Pirin has been destroyed by the wildfires after July 25. There are still local outbreaks on the ground, said Ivan Rizov, director of Strumiany State Forestry Enterprise in an interview with the Bulgarian news..

published on 8/4/25 1:13 PM

57,000 pensioners continue to work in the state sector

225,788 Bulgarians with pension for length of service and age continue to work in order to earn additional income. If people with other types of pensions are added to them, their total number exceeds 350,000 people or over 17.5..

published on 8/4/25 11:56 AM
Rumen Draganov

Adopting the euro will not make tourism more expensive, it will even reduce some prices

Bulgaria's entry into the eurozone on January 1, 2026 will not make vacations more expensive. This is what Rumen Draganov, director of the Institute for Analysis and Forecasts in Tourism told the Bulgarian National Radio. The prices..

published on 8/4/25 11:14 AM