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- Cool Facts
- Description
- Similar Species
- Sound
- Range
- Habitat
- Food
- Behavior
- Reproduction
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
A small, stocky, forest-dwelling hawk of eastern deciduous forests, the Broad-winged Hawk is hard to see on its nesting grounds. It becomes more conspicuous on migration when it congregates into flocks and passes by hawk migration lookouts in the thousands.
Cool Facts
- The Broad-winged Hawk comes in two color phases: the
common light phase and a rare dark phase. The dark form is entirely sooty
brown with a tail like the light morph, and with whitish flight feathers
contrasting with the dark wing linings. It is found primarily in the
northwestern part of the range, and accounts for less than 0.1% of migrants
observed.
- The Broad-winged Hawk completely leaves its breeding
grounds in the fall and winter. Huge numbers of migrating broad-wings can be
seen at hawk watches across the East. It usually migrates in large flocks or
"kettles" that can range from a couple of individuals to thousands.
- A recent study attached satellite transmitters to the
backs of four Broad-winged Hawks and followed them as they migrated south in
the fall. The hawks migrated an average of 7,000 km (4,350 mi) to northern South
America, and traveled an average of 111 km (69 mi) each day. Once at the
wintering grounds, the hawks did not move around much, staying on average
within 2.6 square km (1 square mi).
Description
- Size: 34-44 cm (13-17 in)
- Wingspan: 81-100 cm (32-39 in)
- Weight: 265-560 g (9.35-19.77 ounces)
- Medium-sized hawk.
- Body stout.
- Wings broad.
- Wings pale, with dark trailing edge.
- Tail medium-short.
- Tail dark with one thick white band in middle, and one thinner near tail
base and tip.
- Face dark.
- Chest reddish, reddish barring along sides.
- Throat white.
- Rare dark morph is sooty all over, with whiter flight
feathers.
- Wingtips slightly pointed in flight, giving wing a
"flame-like" shape.
- Beak black, grading to gray-blue.
- Cere over bill yellow.
- Legs and feet light yellow.
- Eyes amber to brown in light morph, red in dark morph.
Sex Differences
Sexes look alike; female slightly larger.
Immature
Juvenile similar to adult, but underparts white with streaks down center of breast, and tail buff with thin dark bands.
Similar Species
- Red-shouldered Hawk has reddish shoulders, a more solid orange chest, longer legs,
barring on the wing feathers, and its wingtips are less pointed. The
Red-shouldered Hawk also has a banded tail, but the white bands are
narrower than the black, while the Broad-winged Hawk's central white band is
as wide as the black bands.
- Cooper's Hawk has a much longer tail that extends well
beyond the wing tips, a paler face, and a dark cap.
Sound
Call a thin, high whistled "kee-eee."
»listen to songs of this species
Range
Range Map
© 2003 Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Summer Range
Breeds from Ontario to Nova Scotia, southward to Texas and northern Florida, and westward to central Alberta. Also in Caribbean.
Winter Range
Winters from southern Mexico southward to South America, and in Caribbean. Some winter in southern Florida.
Habitat
Breeds in continuous deciduous or mixed-deciduous forest. Winters in tropical forests.
Food
Small mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and large insects.
Behavior
Foraging
Drops on prey from perch in canopy.
Reproduction
Nest Type
Large bowl of sticks, lined with bark chips. Often decorated with green twigs. May be placed on old crow or squirrel nest.
Egg Description
White or slightly bluish, with brownish patches or dots.
Clutch Size
Usually 2-3 eggs. Range: 1-5.
Condition at Hatching
Helpless, eyes open, covered in white down.
Conservation Status
Populations stable or increasing.
Other Names
Petite Buse (French)
Busardo aliancho (Spanish)
Sources used to construct this page:
- Goodrich, L. J., S. C. Crocoll, and S. E. Senner. 1996. Broad-winged Hawk
(Buteo platypterus). In The Birds of North America, No. 218 (A. Poole and F.
Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The
American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C.
-
Haines, A. M., M. J. McGrady, M. S. Martell, B. J. Dayton, M. B. Henke, and W. S. Seegar. 2003. Migration routes and wintering locations of Broad-winged Hawks tracked by satellite telemetry. Wilson Bulletin 115:
166-169.