Vacancy depth profiles installed by rapid thermal annealing can be monitored either by Pt diffusion or through vacancy-assisted oxygen precipitation. The features of these profiles clearly show that the vacancy species manifested in these experiments is a "slow vacancy", V-s. The evolution of V-s depth profiles is controlled by an exchange with another (mobile) kind of vacancy that is likely to be a "Watkins vacancy", V-w, first observed at cryogenic temperatures. At low T the conversion of V-s into V-w is slow and practically irreversible. At higher T the two species coexist in an equilibrium ratio and diffuse as one entity with an averaged diffusivity. This model provides a good fit to the RTA-installed depth profiles of V-s. The total vacancy community includes, beside V-s and V-w, also a fast vacancy V-f that is responsible for the vacancy contribution into self-diffusion at high T. In RTA experiments, the V-f species seems to be completely annihilated by self-interstitials which leaves only two other vacancy species, V-s and V-w. (C) 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH&Co.KGaA, Weinheim