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Peregrine Falcon

From Opus

Revision as of 16:43, 22 June 2009 by HelenB (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ←Older revision | Current revision (diff) | Newer revision→ (diff)
Photo by RMDPhoto taken: Nhulunbuy Northern Territory, Australia
Photo by RMD
Photo taken: Nhulunbuy Northern Territory, Australia

Includes Cape Verde Peregrine Falcon

Falco peregrinus
Photo by Gary Clark.Location: Santa Fe Nat'l Forest, New Mexico, USA.
Photo by Gary Clark.
Location: Santa Fe Nat'l Forest, New Mexico, USA.

Contents

[edit] Identification

L. 15–21 in

  • Thick, dark moustachial stripe
  • Sides of neck white
  • Hooked blue/gray bill

Adult Slate grey above (female rather browner), buff barred darker below. Cere, legs and area around the eyes is yellow
Juvenile: dark brown above , streaked below

[edit] Distribution

Almost worldwide. In North America breeds in Alaska, northern and western Canada and western coastal Greenland.

[edit] Taxonomy

17 races are recognised: In North America F. p. anatum breeds across much of the continent, pealei on the Pacific coast and tundrius in the far north. Race cassini breeds in southern South America. The nominate race peregrinus breeds over Europe and western Asia, calidus in Siberia and japonensis in eastern Asia. F. p. brookei breeds around the Mediterranean and peregrinator from India to southern China. The tropical African race is minor, madens breeds on the Cape Verde Islands and radama in Madagascar and the Comoros. F. p. ernesti breeds in the Philippines, Indonesia and New Guinea, nesiotis in Vanuatu, the Loyalty Islands and New Caledonia, furuitii on Volcano Island, macropus in Australia and submelanogenys in south-west Australia.

Photo by CurtMorganLocation: Upstate New York, USA, June 2009
Photo by CurtMorgan
Location: Upstate New York, USA, June 2009

[edit] Habitat

Cliff-faces for breeding, hunts over cultivated land and grassland, marshes and wetlands, beaches and the sea. Also increasingly using urban areas to nest/breed on buildings.

[edit] Behaviour

[edit] Flight

Takes prey on ground and in the air using height advantage to gain speed. Often employs a high speed steep dive where reported speeds exceed 200kph. The impact of this dive can kill prey outright. Also pursues prey such as Feral Pigeon/Rock Dove in flight using speed from a dive and rapid jinking manoeuvering.

[edit] Diet

The diet includes birds, such as doves, waterfowl and songbirds, occasionally hunt small mammals, including bats, rats, voles and rabbits. Insects and reptiles make up a relatively small proportion of their diet. Peregrine Falcons also eat their own chicks when starving.

[edit] Breeding

A scrape on a cliff ledge is made and 3-4 eggs are laid. The females incubate the eggs for 29-32 days. Chicks fledge 35-42 days after hatching. Is increasingly being reported using urban high-rise buildings and churches for nest/breeding sites to prey on Feral Pigeon.

[edit] Vocalisation


Listen in an external program

[edit] References

  1. Collins Pocket Guide to British Birds 1966

[edit] External Links


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