|
||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
Northern Harrier
Northern Harrier, female with nestlings 9-11 days old
About the photographs
Northern Harrier, female at nest with young 9-10 d old
Northern Harrier, juvenile in flight.
Northern Harrier, juvenile (1st year; Juvenal plumage); Jamaica Bay, NY
Menu
A long-winged, long-tailed hawk of open grassland and marshes, the Northern Harrier forages by flying slowly low above the ground looking for small rodents. It is one of the few raptors in which the sexes look quite different: the male is white below with a light gray back and hood, the female is mottled in browns. Cool Facts
Description
Sex DifferencesMale gray on back, light below, and wingtips black. Female brown on back and striped brown and white below. Female larger. MaleHead, back, and upper chest light gray. Chest and belly white, usually with some rusty markings extending onto flanks. Wingtips black. Line of black on rear of wings. Underwings white. Tail darkish gray above and whitish below, with some barring. Rump white. FemaleBack dark brown, with many feathers edged with tawny. Face streaked brown and whitish. Face outlined by white facial disk. Chest and belly streaked dirty white and tan. Rump white. Upper side of wings brown, lower side barred white and dark brown. Tail brown with dark bars. ImmatureJuvenile similar to adult female, but with rusty wash across mostly unstreaked underparts. Similar Species
SoundCourtship call a series of "kek" or "ke" notes. Also a piercing, descending scream. »listen to songs of this speciesRangeSummer RangeBreeds across Alaska and Canada, southward to California, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, and Maryland. Also across Eurasia. Winter RangeWinters from southern Canada throughout the United States southward throughout Central America and the Caribbean to northern South America. Also in Eurasia and northern Africa. HabitatOpen wetlands, meadows, pastures, prairies, grasslands, croplands, and riparian woodlands. FoodSmall mammals, birds, reptiles, and frogs. BehaviorForagingHunts on wing, flying low over open habitats. ReproductionNest TypePlatform of vegetation placed on ground in open field or meadow. Egg DescriptionWhite and unspotted. Clutch SizeUsually 4-6 eggs. Range: 2-10.Condition at HatchingCovered in white down, with eyes open. Conservation StatusPopulations declined in 20th century from loss of wetlands and changes in farming practices. Now stable or slightly declining in most areas. Other NamesBusard Saint-Martin (French) Sources used to construct this page:MacWhirter, R. B., and K. L. Bildstein. 1996. Northern Harrier (Circus cyaneus). In The Birds of North America, No. 210 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists? Union, Washington, D.C. |
|||||||||||||