The Eurasian griffon vulture is resident in parts of the
Iberian Peninsula, in the eastern
Atlas Mountains, the eastern
Alps, parts of
Anatolia and the
Caucasus, parts of the
Arabian Peninsula and the
Iranian plateau, and in the
Tian Shan and
Altai Mountains. In
Ireland, the first record of a griffon vulture occurred in 1843 in
Cork. In 2000, a vulture took up residence on
Guernsey island. In
Croatia, a Eurasian griffon vulture colony lives near the town of
Beli on
Cres island. (
Gyps bengalensis), showing the difference in size and coloration between the two species In
Serbia, there are around 450-500 individuals with about 110 pairs of Eurasian griffon vultures around
Zlatar mountain and also 35 birds in the canyon of the
Trešnjica river. In
Greece, there are nearly 1000 Eurasian griffon vultures. The majority of this population resides in
Crete, which hosts the largest insular population of the species in the world. On Crete they inhabit mountainous areas, sometimes in groups of up to 20. In
Cyprus, there was a colony of fewer than 30 Eurasian griffon vultures at
Episkopi, in the south of the island in 2006. In Germany, the species died out in the mid-18th century. Some 200 vagrant birds, probably from the Pyrenees, were sighted in 2006, == Behaviour and ecology ==