http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#value | - The first is that the name is a reference to its habit of displacing smaller vultures from a carcass and eating its fill while they wait.[7] An alternative theory reports that the name is derived from Mayan legends, in which the bird was a king who served as a messenger between humans and the gods.[8] This bird was also known as the White Crow by the Spanish in Paraguay.[9] It was called cozcacu
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