Main Content
Producing only one chick every other year, survival of the endangered Andean condor relies on captive breeding programs.
Photograph by Anne Keiser
Map
Andean Condor Range
Fast Facts
- Type:
- Bird
- Diet:
- Carnivore
- Size:
- Body, 4 ft (1.2 m); wingspan, up to 10.5 ft (3.2 m)
- Weight:
- Up to 33 lbs (15 kg)
- Protection status:
- Endangered
- Did you know?
- The Andean condor has the largest wing area of any bird.
- Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
-
Andean condors are massive birds, among the largest in the world that are able to fly. Because they are so heavy (up to 33 pounds/15 kilograms), even their enormous 10-foot (3-meter) wingspan needs some help to keep them aloft. For that reason, these birds prefer to live in windy areas where they can glide on air currents with little effort. Andean condors are found in mountainous regions, as their name suggests, but also live near coasts replete with ocean breezes and even deserts that feature strong thermal air currents.
These condors are mostly black, but males have a distinctive white "collar" around their necks and some white markings on their wings as well. Like their relatives, the California condors, Andean condors have bald heads.
Condors are vultures, so they keep their sharp eyes peeled for the carrion that makes up most of their diet. They prefer to feast on large animals, wild or domestic, and in picking the carcasses, they perform an important function as a natural clean-up crew. Along the coasts, condors will feed on dead marine animals like seals or fish. These birds do not have sharp predator's claws, but they will raid birds' nests for eggs or even young hatchlings.
These long-lived birds have survived over 75 years in captivity, but they reproduce slowly. A mating pair produces only a single offspring every other year, and both parents must care for their young for a full year.
The Andean condor is considered endangered but is in far better shape than its California cousin. Perhaps a few thousand South American birds survive, and reintroduction programs are working to supplement that number.
Bird Features
-
Backyard Birding Central
Want to learn more about our feathered friends of the sky? Visit our Backyard Birding site for facts, photos, videos, and more.
-
What's That Bird?
Identify your backyard visitors in a flash! Just answer four simple questions to search our database of 150 backyard birds common to Canada and the U.S.
-
Bowerbirds Photo Gallery
To win choosy females, male bowerbirds swagger, croon, and … decorate. In some species, only males with the most spectacular lairs, like this Vogelkop on New Guinea, succeed in passing on their genes.
-
Coming This Fall
Don't miss Great Migrations, a seven-part television event taking you around the world on the arduous journeys millions of animals undertake to ensure the survival of their species.
Animals A-Z
Advertisement
Special Ad Section
-
School Contest
Enter your idea in the Find Your Footprint contest and your classroom and school could win big!
-
Vote Now
Over 14,000 photographs were submitted to the contest. Vote for your favorite finalists!
Go Backyard Birding
Interested in birding? Visit our brand new Backyard Birding site for bird facts, photos, audio, and more!
-
What's That Bird?
Identify your backyard visitors in a flash with four simple questions.
-
Bird Photos
View fantastic user-submitted bird photos from all over the world.
National Geographic Magazine
-
Bowerbirds Gallery
To woo a "Mary," bowerbirds decorate with shells, cans, even pink paper clips.
-
Counting Cranes Gallery
How many whooping cranes are there? Not enough. See photos of these birds in action.