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Booted Eagle - BirdForum Opus

Revision as of 18:45, 10 September 2008 by Jthoppes (talk | contribs) (songs)
Hieraaetus pennatus
Photo of dark phase by Steve G
Location: near Almaraz, Caceres province (Extremadura), Spain
Photo of pale phase by Steve G
Location: Near Monroy, Caceres, Spain
Photo of upperside (dark phase) by ColD
Location: Kaliviani, Crete

Identification

Booted Eagles occur in 2 distinct colour morphs, pale & dark. There is also a rare rufous form which is essentially a pale extreme of the dark morph. Pale phase birds predominate, particularly so in the west of the bird's range where the ratio of pale to dark is approaching 4:1. The incidence of dark phase birds increases towards the east of the birds range approaching a 3:2 ratio of pale to dark in Turkey.

The light phase bird is reasonably easy to identify, with pale wing coverts and most flight feathers black; inner primaries are barred lighter. The dark phase is a little more tricky to ID but it is separated from similar sized raptors by its pale inner primaries which show faint barring, its 6 "fingered" hand & at the right angle, the white "landing lights" on the front wings proximally (which are not visible on this bird). Upperside is similar in the two phases, notice the paler median coverts on the upperwing and a narrow pale area where tail meets uppertail coverts.

Distribution

Europe, Asia, and Africa. In Europe breeds in southern Portugal and much of Spain including Mallorca, and in scattered parts of central and southern France. Patchy range further east in Europe including southern Slovakia and northern Hungary, southern Romania and Bulgaria and parts of former Yugoslavia and Greece. Also breeds in extreme east Poland and south Belarus, and the Ukraine east into southern Russia and over much of Turkey and the Caucasus. Range extends eastwards to Central Asia breeding in western Sinkiang and also in north-east China. In Africa breeds in the north-west from central Morocco to north-east Tunisia and in the far south in Cape Province, South Africa. A summer visitor to breeding range that winters in sub-Saharan Africa, India and in South-East Asia south to the Malay Peninsula. The main routes used by migrants to Africa are Gibraltar, the Bosphorus and through the Caucasus. The highest numbers travel via Gibraltar in late-August to early-October, peaking in mid-September. The return movement takes place early March-May, peaking in early April. Small numbers winter in Europe mainly in southern parts of France and Spain. Vagrant north to Iceland, Sweden, Denmark, Switzerland, and Germany (first breeding in 1995), also Luxembourg and Belgium but only a single record for the British Isles when one individual spent March-August 1999 in Ireland and October 1999 to February 2000 at various localities in south-west England. The same bird or another was reported from Kent in April 2000. However, this individual has not been accepted as a genuine vagrant and has been placed in Category D of the British List, ie there is doubt concerning its origins. In 1998 a vagrant was recorded on Madeira for the first time. Most vagrants are immatures and recorded in summer and autumn. In May 2002 an immature was reported on Alderney in the Channel Islands. In the east recorded as a vagrant to Bali.

Taxonomy

Aquila vs. Hieraaetus

Hieraaetus species are sometimes placed in a broader defined Aquila (e.g. Clements, 2005). Sibley & Monroe (1996) and Howard & Moore (2003) retain the placement in Hieraaetus, and the Opus awaits further clarification.

Subspecies

There is wide disagreement about how many subspecies exists, from some saying monotypic, over two to four subspecies recognized. If two races are recognised they would be: harterti in south-west and Central Asia and nominate (pennatus) in remainder of range. If four, the additional subspecies would be milvoides and minisculus.

Habitat

Hilly country or mountains where open areas alternate with woodland. Nests in trees, often on warm sunny slopes.

Behaviour

Nest is placed in a tree, built byt both male and female. Female does the bulk of incubating, with most often two eggs leading to only one fully grown nestling. The nestling becomes independent shortly after leaving the nest (about two weeks).

Bird Song

<flashmp3>Hieraaetus pennatus (song).mp3</flashmp3>
Listen in an external program

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