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Harris's Hawk
First year Harris's Hawk in flight, Vizcaino Peninsula, Baja California Sur, Mexico, 29 Sep 2005.
About the photographs
Harris's Hawk taking flight
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A handsome hawk of the arid Southwest, the Harris's Hawk hunts cooperatively in pairs or trios. The hawks surround their prey, flush it for another to catch, or take turns chasing it. Cool Facts
Description
Medium-sized to large hawk. Dark overall. White rump and undertail. White tip to dark tail. Chestnut-red thighs and shoulders. Legs and bare face skin yellow. Sex DifferencesSexes look alike, female larger. ImmatureJuvenile similar to adults, except underparts streaked with cream or buffy coloration; amount of light color variable. Rufous patches reduced and dullish. Underwing has whitish primaries, conspicuous in flight. Tail crossed with many fine dusky bars; base and tip white. Similar Species
SoundCall a prolonged, harsh "irrr." RangeSummer RangeResident in southern Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. Also southward to South America. HabitatArid lowland scrub, arid montane scrub, tropical deciduous forest, low seasonally wet grassland, recently in some suburbs of desert cities. ReproductionCondition at HatchingHelpless and covered in down. Conservation StatusDeclining in the United States. Other NamesBuse de Harris. (French) Sources used to construct this page:Bednarz, J. C. 1995. Harris? Hawk (Parabuteo unicinctus). In The Birds of North America, No. 146 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, and The American Ornithologists? Union, Washington, D.C. |
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