ChrisKten
It's true, I quite like Pigeons

Here is a pic of one of at least 4 Pigeons injured over the last 6 months, and I'm not sure of the culprit. Pic through double gazing and poor light, but you can see the injury.
First one that appeared was unable to fly, and looked like she'd escaped from a Cat. I brought her in, and expected her to die from infection from the infamous germ-laden Cat's bite... but she fully recovered after a couple of weeks, so I released her. That was 5 months ago, she's successfully (AFAIK) mated since.
A few weeks later, a Wood Pigeon showed up looking near death. It had half it's wing feathers missing from one wing, and looked half-eaten. If not for the missing wing feathers, I'd have thought a Sparrowhawk likely, but the wings of prey are nearly always intact, and it didn't look right. I've no idea how, but the Wood Pigeon escaped me and flew off... with only one-and-a-half wings, and chewed up, I expect it's long dead now.
Since then, every now and again, other Pigeons have showed up with an identical injury... upper chest, near/under wing joint. Looks like a small area has been plucked - right-side of chest most obvious, some (not all) have barely-noticeable injury on the other side as well. The birds are shocked and struggle to fly, but all have either flown off on their own or have been helped by me and recovered fully.
So, I've eliminated a Sparrowhawk - one this useless at subduing and eating prey wouldn't last long. A Cat would be my best guess, except all birds are surviving - I'd expect to see at least one bird die from infection. Incidently, years ago, Pigeons were being killed by Cats, but I couldn't figure out how they was being caught, as my garden is pretty well protected from Cats (yes, I know, they overcome most of our feeble efforts to deter them). One day I saw a paw with outstretched claws poke through a hole at the bottom of the fence. A Cat had been waiting on the other side of the fence for Pigeons to walk by - injuring the wing/chest closest to the fence - climbing over to get the Pigeon that was now unable to fly.
Also, Cats do injure animals to "play" with them - I've seen them cripple mice and birds so they couldn't escape... they then tease them by letting them get away a bit before catching them again. But these Pigeons can still fly, so only an inept Cat would make sense I guess.
One other possibility is the Squirrels, as the Pigeons harass them to get them to drop the kernels from the Monkey Nuts as they extract them from the shells. Eventually the Squirrels get annoyed and lash out, but I've not seen any obvious injuries caused by it. But if you've ever seen a Squirrel's claws close up, you'll know that they can cause injury very easily when necessary.
So, any other ideas what could be causing this?
First one that appeared was unable to fly, and looked like she'd escaped from a Cat. I brought her in, and expected her to die from infection from the infamous germ-laden Cat's bite... but she fully recovered after a couple of weeks, so I released her. That was 5 months ago, she's successfully (AFAIK) mated since.
A few weeks later, a Wood Pigeon showed up looking near death. It had half it's wing feathers missing from one wing, and looked half-eaten. If not for the missing wing feathers, I'd have thought a Sparrowhawk likely, but the wings of prey are nearly always intact, and it didn't look right. I've no idea how, but the Wood Pigeon escaped me and flew off... with only one-and-a-half wings, and chewed up, I expect it's long dead now.
Since then, every now and again, other Pigeons have showed up with an identical injury... upper chest, near/under wing joint. Looks like a small area has been plucked - right-side of chest most obvious, some (not all) have barely-noticeable injury on the other side as well. The birds are shocked and struggle to fly, but all have either flown off on their own or have been helped by me and recovered fully.
So, I've eliminated a Sparrowhawk - one this useless at subduing and eating prey wouldn't last long. A Cat would be my best guess, except all birds are surviving - I'd expect to see at least one bird die from infection. Incidently, years ago, Pigeons were being killed by Cats, but I couldn't figure out how they was being caught, as my garden is pretty well protected from Cats (yes, I know, they overcome most of our feeble efforts to deter them). One day I saw a paw with outstretched claws poke through a hole at the bottom of the fence. A Cat had been waiting on the other side of the fence for Pigeons to walk by - injuring the wing/chest closest to the fence - climbing over to get the Pigeon that was now unable to fly.
Also, Cats do injure animals to "play" with them - I've seen them cripple mice and birds so they couldn't escape... they then tease them by letting them get away a bit before catching them again. But these Pigeons can still fly, so only an inept Cat would make sense I guess.
One other possibility is the Squirrels, as the Pigeons harass them to get them to drop the kernels from the Monkey Nuts as they extract them from the shells. Eventually the Squirrels get annoyed and lash out, but I've not seen any obvious injuries caused by it. But if you've ever seen a Squirrel's claws close up, you'll know that they can cause injury very easily when necessary.
So, any other ideas what could be causing this?