To say that vultures are underappreciated would be putting it mildly.
With their diet of carrion and their featherless heads, the birds are often viewed with disgust.
Now, economists have put an excruciating figure on just how vital they can be: The sudden near-disappearance of vultures in India about two decades ago led to more than half a million excess human deaths over five years, according to a forthcoming study in the American Economic Review.
Rotting livestock carcasses, no longer picked to the bones by vultures, polluted waterways and fed an increase in feral dogs, which can carry rabies.
It was “a really huge negative sanitation shock,” said Anant Sudarshan, one of the study’s authors and an economics professor at the University of Warwick in England.
Persons:
”, Anant Sudarshan
Organizations:
American Economic, University of Warwick
Locations:
India, England