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Difference between revisions of "Pale Chanting Goshawk" - BirdForum Opus

(Category:Melierax)
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;Melierax canorus
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;[[:Category:Melierax|Melierax]] canorus
 
[[Image:Pale_Chanting_Goshawk.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by jdbirdman<br/>Photographed: Kruger National Park, R.S.A]]
 
[[Image:Pale_Chanting_Goshawk.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by jdbirdman<br/>Photographed: Kruger National Park, R.S.A]]
 
==Identification==
 
==Identification==
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==Taxonomy==
 
==Taxonomy==
Two subspecies are sometimes recognised: the nominate race from Cape Province to Orange Free State and ''argentior'' in remainder of range.  
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Two subspecies are sometimes recognised: the nominate race from Cape Province to Orange Free State (South Africa) and ''argentior'' in remainder of range.  
 
==Habitat==
 
==Habitat==
 
Desert, semi-desert and dry grassland with scattered trees. Requires trees for nesting and uses termite-hills, telephone poles, fenceposts and treetops as lookout posts.
 
Desert, semi-desert and dry grassland with scattered trees. Requires trees for nesting and uses termite-hills, telephone poles, fenceposts and treetops as lookout posts.
 
==Behaviour==
 
==Behaviour==
The diet includes lizards and insects, small mammals up to the size of a hare.
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The diet includes lizards and insects, and small mammals up to the size of a hare.
  
It builds a nest of small sticks and dung, added as lining. It can be up to twenty inches across with a shallow cup of ten inches diameter. 1-2 pale bluish or greenish white, unmarked, eggs are laid at intervals of several days. The female only incubates, and when two eggs are laid they hatch at intervals of several days. Only one young is normally reared from a nest of two. The young after leaving the nest may be found near it for some months and in the following year may even be found displaying in the same area.  
+
It builds a nest of small sticks and dung, added as lining. It can be up to twenty inches across with a shallow cup of ten inches diameter. 1-2 pale bluish or greenish white, unmarked, eggs are laid at intervals of several days. Only the female incubates, and when two eggs are laid they hatch at intervals of several days. Only one young is normally reared from a nest of two. The young after leaving the nest may be found near it for some months and in the following year may even be found displaying in the same area.  
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
 
{{GSearch|Melierax+canorus}}   
 
{{GSearch|Melierax+canorus}}   
[[Category:Birds]]
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[[Category:Birds]] [[Category:Melierax]]

Revision as of 14:40, 12 June 2008

Melierax canorus
Photo by jdbirdman
Photographed: Kruger National Park, R.S.A

Identification

Male - grey crown, pale nape and upper back, white upper tail coverts with white bar at base of tail. Central tail feathers black, tipped with white, outer feathers barred grey and white. Primary flight feathers black and grey. Chin, throat, upper breast are pale grey, lower breast, belly, thights are dark grey and white. Eyes and legs are red. Juveniles are duller and sepia brown.

The calls are a rapidly repeated klueee-kli-kli-kli-kli-kli-klip-kleeeep and a long, drawn-out, high-pitched kleeeee-u, kleeeee-u at distinct intervals.

Distribution

South-west Angola, Namibia, South Africa, Botswana and south-west Zimbabwe.

Taxonomy

Two subspecies are sometimes recognised: the nominate race from Cape Province to Orange Free State (South Africa) and argentior in remainder of range.

Habitat

Desert, semi-desert and dry grassland with scattered trees. Requires trees for nesting and uses termite-hills, telephone poles, fenceposts and treetops as lookout posts.

Behaviour

The diet includes lizards and insects, and small mammals up to the size of a hare.

It builds a nest of small sticks and dung, added as lining. It can be up to twenty inches across with a shallow cup of ten inches diameter. 1-2 pale bluish or greenish white, unmarked, eggs are laid at intervals of several days. Only the female incubates, and when two eggs are laid they hatch at intervals of several days. Only one young is normally reared from a nest of two. The young after leaving the nest may be found near it for some months and in the following year may even be found displaying in the same area.

External Links

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