Ferruginous Hawk
A species of Buzzards and Buteo Hawks Scientific name : Buteo regalis Genus : Buzzards and Buteo Hawks
Ferruginous Hawk, A species of Buzzards and Buteo Hawks
Botanical name: Buteo regalis
Genus: Buzzards and Buteo Hawks
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Description People often ask General Info
Description
The ferruginous Hawk is a magnificent bird of prey known for its rusty red-brown feathers, broad wingspan, and impressive hunting abilities. This bird is a versatile predator, capable of hunting both in the air and on the ground and adapting to various habitats including deserts, grasslands, and agricultural areas. With its sharp talons and keen eyesight, the Ferruginous Hawk is a formidable hunter, able to spot its prey from high in the sky and make a swift and precise strike.
Size
56-71 cm (22-28 in)
Colors
Brown
Black
Bronze
Gray
White
Life Expectancy
20 years
Nest Placement
Tree
Clutch Size
1 - 8 eggs
Number of Broods
32 - 33 days
Nestling Period
38 - 50 days
Feeding Habits
Ferruginous Hawk's diet primarily includes small to medium-sized mammals, notably rabbits, hares, ground squirrels, and prairie dogs, comprising 80-90% of their diet. They also consume birds, reptiles, and insects. Their hunting strategies vary, involving perch and wait, low and high-level flight, hovering, ground perching at burrows, cooperative hunting, and occasionally piracy. They use both diurnal and bimodal (dawn and dusk) hunting patterns and may hunt on the ground by running or hopping, sometimes engaging in competitive behavior to secure prey.
Habitat
Ferruginous Hawk principally inhabit open, wide-ranging terrain such as arid and semi-arid grasslands, sagebrush, shrublands, and the peripheries of pinyon-juniper woodlands. These birds favor expansive, tree-sparse areas typically at low to moderate elevations, including grasslands and desert landscapes. Crucial to their environment are features like cliffs, outcrops, tree groves, and occasionally human-made structures providing nesting sites. While ferruginous Hawk maintain a distance from other raptors’ nests, they require a consistent prey source, found in both natural and agricultural fields, where post-harvest stubble supports their diet. Wintering grounds echo their summer habitats, varying east and west of the Rockies. Here, ferruginous Hawk predominantly reside in grasslands abundant with prey like prairie dogs, demonstrating adaptability to both seasonally and human-modified environments.
Nest Behavior
Ferruginous Hawk pairs collaboratively select and construct their nest, occasionally refurbish old ones, within a week. Egg-laying patterns are not specified, but both parents engage in nest building and may abandon it if disturbed.
Nest Characteristics
Nests of ferruginous Hawk are found in varied locations from lone trees to ground slopes, measuring over 3 feet in both height and width, comprising sticks, twigs, and unconventional materials like metal debris. Some have linings of cow dung, sod, or bark.
Dite type
Carnivorous
People often ask
General Info
Behavior
Ferruginous Hawk typically exhibit solitary or paired behavior, with seasonal variations including communal roosting in small groups. Their daily life involves roosting on diverse elevated structures, showcasing fidelity with possible year-round pair bonds. Distinctive courtship involves aerial displays and tandem free-falls. Ferruginous Hawk share habitats with similar raptors, displaying territorial aggression during breeding. Interestingly, despite their dominance, they tolerate smaller songbirds nesting nearby.
Species Status
At times the ferruginous hawk has been considered threatened, endangered, or of concern on various threatened species lists but recent population increases in local areas, coupled with conservation initiatives, have created some optimism about the bird's future. It was formerly classified as a Near Threatened species by the IUCN, but new research has confirmed that the Ferruginous hawk is common and widespread again. Consequently, it was downlisted to Least Concern status in 2008. Declines are mostly due to loss of quality habitat. Although flexible in choosing a nest site and exhibiting a high reproductive potential, this bird's restriction to natural grasslands on the breeding grounds and specialized predation on mammals persecuted on rangelands may make conservation a continuous concern. Historically, the birds entirely disappeared from areas where agriculture displaced the natural flora and fauna; for example it was noted in 1916 that the species was "practically extinct" in San Mateo County, California. Studies have found that prairie dogs can be a main prey item for ferruginous hawks, linking them to the populations of prairie dog towns in the mid-west and southwestern United States, which have been declining in recent years. This bird may also be sensitive to the use of pesticides on farms; they are also frequently shot. Threats to the overall population include: cultivation of native prairie grassland and subsequent habitat loss tree invasion of northern grassland habitats reductions in food supply due to agricultural pest management programs shooting and human interference The ferruginous hawk was on the National Audubon Society's "Blue List" of species felt to be declining. From 1971 to 1981 it retained its "blue" status, and from 1982 to 1986 it was listed as a species of "Special Concern." The United States Fish and Wildlife Service placed it in a category of "undetermined" in 1973, and various states have placed it in categories of "Threatened" or "Endangered." In Canada, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada considered this species "Threatened" in 1980. Across the Canadian prairies, the range was diminishing up until 1980, and at that time, birds were felt to be occupying 48% of its original range. Numbers were generally felt to be diminishing and a total Canadian population was estimated at 500 to 1000 pairs. By 1987, population increases were being noted, and the Alberta population alone was estimated at 1,800 pairs. The upswing was likely due to a greater availability of food on the wintering grounds, making the birds more likely to breed when they returned to Canada. In the United States, there has been a history of concern for this species in many states with declines noted, but in 1988, one study suggested that the population in California and locally elsewhere may have increased significantly. The wintering population north of Mexico was estimated at 5,500 birds in 1986. In 1984, the population estimate for North America was between 3,000 and 4,000 pairs, and in 1987, it was 14,000 individuals. Toxic chemicals have not been suggested as a significant threat to the ferruginous hawk. Management strategies must include the retention or reclamation of native grasslands for breeding as well as on the wintering grounds. Maintenance of high populations of prey species in wintering areas seems critical to the hawks' abilities to move onto the summer range in breeding condition. The integration of agricultural practices and policies into the management strategies is a crucial component of any overall scheme for conservation. The provision of nesting platforms has had positive effects and should be a part of local strategies. Public education and the elimination of persecution and human disturbance must be an important part of the overall conservation program.