“…Raptors are valuable indicators of habitat quality based on their ecological sensitivity as predators and scavengers ( Lerner & Mindell, 2005 ). However, vultures belonging to the Accipitriformes order are currently facing devastating drops in their population numbers from an array of problems ranging from loss of their natural habitat, collision with high-tension electric cables and wind turbines, intentional poisoning of animal carcasses by poachers of endangered wildlife species and accidental ingestion of carcasses contaminated with pharmaceuticals ( Ogada et al, 2016 ; Naidoo et al, 2018 ; Adawaren et al, 2018 ). One notable incident was the near complete extinction of three Gyps vulture species the white-rumped vulture ( Gyps bengalenesis ), the Indian vulture ( G. indicus ) and the slender-billed vulture ( G. tenuirostris ) in India, Nepal and Pakistan from the consumption of carcasses of animals dosed with diclofenac ( Oaks et al, 2004 ; Swan et al, 2006b ; Naidoo et al, 2009 ; Adawaren et al, 2018 ).…”