Eagles and Birds of Prey by DK

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The key takeaways are that the book discusses different birds of prey, their anatomy, hunting techniques, and more.

The book is about eagles and other birds of prey. It describes their anatomy, hunting techniques, mating, nesting, and eating habits.

The book covers topics like the raptor families, eggs and nesting, growth of young raptors, flight, anatomy, hunting techniques, prey, skeletons, and more.

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Eyewitness
Eagle &
Birds of Prey

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White-bellied
Kestrel skeleton sea eagle

Verreaux’s eagle

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Eyewitness
Eagle & Common, or

Birds of Prey
European kestrel crested, caracara

Written by
JEMIMA PARRY-JONES
The National Birds of Prey Centre, England

Photographed by
FRANK GREENAWAY

Saker falcon Bald eagle

DK Publishing, Inc.

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


London, New York,
Melbourne, Munich, and Delhi

Project editor  David Pickering


Art editor  Kati Poynor
Peregrine falcon
Assistant editor  Julie Ferris
African hawk Managing editor  Gill Denton
eagle
Managing art editor  Julia Harris
Production  Charlotte Traill
Picture research  Rachel Leach
DTP designer  Nicola Studdart
Consultant  Colin Shawyer
This Eyewitness ® Book has been conceived by
Dorling Kindersley Limited and Editions Gallimard
© 1997 Dorling Kindersley Limited
This edition © 2000 Dorling Kindersley Limited
First American edition, 1997
Published in the United States by
Dorling Kindersley Publishing, Inc.
375 Hudson Street,
New York, NY 10014
10 9
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright
owner. Published in Great Britain by Dorling Kindersley Limited.
Dorling Kindersley books are available at special discounts for bulk
purchases for sales promotions or premiums. Special editions, including
personalized covers, excerpts of existing guides, and corporate imprints can
be created in large quantities for specific needs. For more information, contact
Special Markets Dept., Dorling Kindersley Publishing, Inc. Foot of wedge-
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data tailed eagle
Parry-Jones, Jemima.
Eagle & birds of prey / written by Jemima Parry-Jones;
photography by Frank Greenaway.
p. cm. — (Eyewitness Books)
Includes index.
Summary: Describes the anatomy, hunting techniques, mating, nesting,
and eating habits of birds of prey.
1. Birds of prey — Juvenile literature. [1. Birds of prey.] I. Title. II. Series.
QL696.F3P386   2000
598.9’1—dc20   96–36420
ISBN-13: 978-0-7894-6618-1 (ALB)
ISBN-13: 978-0-7894-5860-5 (PLC)
Egyptian vulture Color reproduction by Colourscan, Singapore
Printed in China by Toppan Printing Co. (Shenzhen) Ltd.

Discover more at
White-backed vulture

African harrier hawk

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Contents
Tawny eagle

34
Vultures
8 36
What is a bird of prey? Ospreys and fish eagles
10 38
The raptor families Kites and harriers
12 40
Eggs, nests, and hatching Hawks and buzzards
14 42
Growth of the young raptor Eagles
16 44
How raptors fly The secretary bird
20 46
Wings and feathers The falcon family
22 48
Inside a bird of prey Owls
24 52
Feet and talons Birds of prey in history
26 54
Hunting techniques Training a bird of prey
28 56
Prey and feeding Around the world
30 58
Heads and senses Raptor records
32 60
Skeletons Index

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What is a bird of prey?
Birds of prey are not the only birds that hunt for their SPECIAL DIET
food, nor the only birds that eat meat, or have hooked Some raptors will eat just about
anything; others are specialists.
beaks, or fly very well, but they are the only birds One of the most specialized is
that combine all these characteristics, and with the snail kite of Florida. It lives
on a diet of water snails. Its
them, one very distinctive feature: They kill beak has a long, curved
with their feet. They are called raptors, hook with which to
remove the snail
from the Latin raptare, to seize or from its shell.
grasp, because they seize their prey
in their feet. Their lethal talons
can snatch fish from the water,
strike birds out of the air, and
rip open animal quarry
(prey). Like lions and
tigers, raptors are “top
predators”: They hunt
other creatures, but
nothing hunts
them, except for
other raptors –
and humans.

Primary feathers, like


tail feathers, are fanned
out for landing

Tail is used for


steering, soaring,
and braking

Large vultures have


powerful beaks, to rip
open the carcasses of
large animals

The feet of vultures, such as


these white-backed vultures, CATCH IT WHEN IT’S DEAD
are weak because they don’t There is a major exception to the rule that
need to kill their prey birds of prey hunt their food: vultures. Vultures
are specialized in scavenging, that is, finding dead
animals, rather than hunting live ones. Other raptors
will eat carrion (dead flesh) if they happen to
come across it, but only vultures are carrion
specialists. Most vultures spend much of
their time soaring high in the sky,
scanning a wide area for signs of death.


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Ravens eat meat in
much the same way
as many birds of prey

SYMBOL AND STANDARD


Many peoples have taken
birds of prey as symbols of
what they most revere:
gods, freedom, the
sun, royalty. Many
nations, kings, and CARNIVOROUS BIRDS
armies have taken Many meat-eating birds are not birds of
birds of prey as their prey. For example, magpies hunt and kill
emblems. This eagle small birds. Ravens such as these, which
standard comes belong to the crow family, have a diet
from the French similar to that of buzzards. They have
army, c.1800. strong, pointed beaks with which they kill
young rabbits and even the occasional
lamb. But only raptors kill with their feet.

Wing feathers fan


out to give extra
lift (pp. 16–17)

BORN TO KILL
Birds of prey are
perfect hunters. The
tawny eagle pictured Female merlins are
here is a superb flier, and has the usually one-third
characteristic lethal raptor feet. Its heavier than males;
curved beak and claws act as a knife and this is average
fork for tearing through flesh to eat the prey. for falcons
Raptors’ skill as hunters can work against them
if the environment becomes polluted: If each
animal they eat contains a tiny amount of
pollutant, they end up taking in a large
amount. So environmental
damage often hurts them first.

In some birds of
prey, the male is
much more colorful
than the female

DOES SIZE MATTER?


Birds of prey are unusual
in that the females are
usually bigger than the males.
Killing feet: (Scientists call this “reverse sexual
Powerful with dimorphism.”) The size difference varies. It is
huge, curved greatest in sparrowhawks, where the female is
talons for twice the size of the male. Vultures are one of the
grasping prey exceptions: Males and females are usually the same
size, and male condors are larger than female condors.


(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The raptor families
There are raptors on every continent
except Antarctica: Over 300 species of diurnal
Black vulture flying; vultures
(day-flying) birds of prey, and about 130 owl species. Each soar to look for dead animals
of these species plays its own unique part in the ecosystem.
The powerful king vulture;
Scientists class all the day-flying birds of prey together in the New World vultures, like
“order” (group) Falconiformes, which contains five separate storks, urinate on their
own legs to keep cool
“families.” The owls have their own order, the Strigiformes.
Scientists give each order, family, and species a Latin name.
The local names for each bird change with language and
region, but the Latin name is always the same so that scientists
and others do not become confused. The Latin names of the
birds in this book can be found in the index on p. 60.

NEW WORLD VULTURES


These vultures live in the Americas. They
occupy the niche in the food chain that the
Bengal eagle Old World vultures fill in the rest of the
owl flying world: eating up carrion. Although they look
OSPREY quite similar to other vultures, they are, in
Ospreys form a one-species family: They are fact, more closely related to storks than to any
unique and cannot be classed with any others. Spectacled owl, so other raptors and so, according to recent
Specialists at catching fish (the only raptors called because of scientific research, should no longer be
that dive deeply into the water), they eat very its facial markings classed in the Falconiformes order. There are
little else. They are “cosmopolitan,” that is, seven species of New World vulture.
found worldwide, where there is shallow
water – lakes, rivers, or coastal areas.

Pandionidae Iranian eagle


osprey owl chicks
osprey

Andean condor,
largest of all raptors

SECRETARY BIRD
Secretary birds, OWLS – RAPTORS OF THE NIGHT
found in Africa, are Owls are not related to the diurnal birds of
another unique species, in prey. Most are nocturnal (hunt at night) or
a family of their own. They crepuscular (hunt at dawn and dusk). Their
have much longer legs than sight is excellent, especially at night, and
other raptors, stand 1.2 m (4 ft) their hearing is phenomenal. They fly
tall, and hunt by walking, not silently, hunting by stealth, not speed. The turkey vulture is
flying, across grasslands, and There are two families: The dozen or so the only raptor known
stamping on the prey they find. species of barn owl (p. 49), and the rest. to sniff out its food

Sagittariidae Strigiformes Cathartidae


secretary bird owls New World vultures
secretary bird owl condor

10
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Foot of Verreaux’s
eagle from Africa

Large accipitrids The African harrier


Falcons, such have massively hawk is halfway between
as this lanner falcon, have powerful feet a harrier and a hawk
distinctive long, pointed wings
Egyptian vulture shows
Eagles, such as this the broad, muscular
bald eagle, can see accipitrid tongue
at least twice as
far as humans

American kestrels
(right) and other
kestrels are very Hooked tip of beak
good at hovering rips into flesh; sides
of the beak cut it off

Bald eagles’ broad


wings enable them
to soar effortlessly

Large falcons, such as


this peregrine, are the
fastest birds on
earth when they ACCIPITRIDS
dive down These are the
on prey largest group of
raptors: There are
237 species. Hawks,
eagles, buzzards,
kites, Old World
vultures, and harriers
are all accipitrids. Their
kinship shows in their
similar eggs, tongues, and molting
patterns. They all build nests. They
kill with their feet (falconids often
use their beaks as well as their
feet). They squirt out their
droppings, and falconids let
them fall. Most accipitrids
Caracaras are the have a protective ridge of
only falconids to bone above the eye.
build nests and
to hunt on
the ground

THE FALCONID FAMILY


There are three main groups of falcons: the
true falcons (which include kestrels), the
little-known forest falcons, and the pygmy
falcons, or falconets, smallest of the raptors.
The caracaras of the Americas are also related
to them, and form part of the Falconidae
family, which contains about 60 different
species, found all around the world.

Falconidae Accipitridae
falcons and caracaras hawks, kites, buzzards, eagles,
kestrel harriers, Old World vultures goshawk kite buzzard golden eagle

11
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Eggs, nests, and hatching
A ȵȵȩȦȴȵȢȳȵ of the breeding season, male birds try to show females
that they will be good mates. Males perform display flights and bring
the females food to prove that they will be able to feed a family. Pair
bonds are formed, and the new pairs build nests. Each pair often
defends a territory around its own nest to protect its food supply. A few
species, however, including several of the kites and vultures, breed in
colonies. The smallest birds of prey brood (sit on) their eggs for 28 days
before the chicks hatch, the largest for 54 days. Usually, the females
brood the eggs. The males bring the females food until the new chicks
Bald eagle egg are big enough to be safely left alone.

67$57,1*$)$0,/<
Usually, males and females build their nests
together. Male goshawks, however, build
three or four nests, by themselves, for
females to choose from. Nests are often
built in trees or on cliff ledges – in any
safe place. Only a few raptors, such as
harriers and caracaras, normally
build nests on the ground.

Buzzard eggs
in nest

Ural owl egg

Peregrine falcon egg

African pygmy falcon egg

ALL SORTS AND SIZES


The above eggs (shown actual size) Among Verreaux’s eagles, the
illustrate the variety of raptor eggs. 21/<7+(67521*6859,9( first chick hatched always kills
Owl eggs are much rounder than Some eagles have two chicks, but only one the second, even if there is
those of day-flying raptors. Condors usually survives. If food runs short, the older plenty of food for both
and large vultures lay only one egg at chick kills the younger. In a few eagles, the
each breeding attempt, most eagles older always kills the younger. The chicks of Larger branches are
two or three, small birds such as smaller raptors do not usually attack each lodged in tree trunk first,
kestrels about six, and a few species other, although they do compete for food. If then twigs, then leaves
such as snowy owls lay up to 14. food is scarce, the weakest will die.

12
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BIGGEST BUILDER FRAGILE LIFE Air sac
Bald eagles (right) return to Embryos develop inside a
the same nests year after protective membrane within
year, adding to them each the egg. As they do so, an air
time. They become huge. sac appears at the top, or blunt,
One, in Florida, was 9.5 ft end of the egg (right). Where
(2.9 m) wide, 20 ft (6 m) chemicals such as the pesticide
deep, and weighed 2 tons! DDT get into the food chain,
eggs may become infertile or
eggshells so thin they crack
and the embryos die.
WHO’D BE A PARENT? Eggs of accipitrids (p. 11), such as this
For ospreys (left), the breeding 1 First crack or goshawk egg, are blue-green inside
cycle lasts about nine months “pip” in egg
from courting displays until the
young are independent. This is
about average. Most raptors
breed every year, if they can. A
few very large birds have to
look after their chicks for more
than a year, so can only breed 3 Newly hatched babies rest for
every other year. 2 Baby pecks all around shell, several hours before feeding
then makes one huge push
BABY BARN OWL BREAKS OUT
When an egg is ready to hatch, the chick taps
away for a day or so with a pointed lump called
an egg tooth on top of its beak, and “cheeps,”
perhaps alerting its mother. Finally it makes a
crack or hole in the shell. After
about another day of tapping,
it breaks out. The process
can take up to three days.

SECOND-HAND NEST
These kestrel chicks are in a buzzard nest. Owls, falcons,
and New World vultures do not build their own nests.
Sometimes they take over old nests. More often, they dig a
scrape in the surface in some sheltered place. It may be in a
cave, on a cliff ledge, in an old barn, or even on the ledge of
a skyscraper. Owls may nest in the hollow of a tree.

13
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Growth of the young raptor
Young birds of prey grow very fast, racing through the most vulnerable
stage of life. For their first few weeks they just eat, sleep, and grow. Young
sparrowhawks are fledged (full-grown and flying) after 26 days and can hunt
Two-day-old black well enough to feed themselves four weeks later. Larger birds develop more
vulture chick
slowly, but even a golden eagle is fledged at two and a half months and
independent of its parents three months later. In temperate climates, raptors need to be
full-grown and ready to hunt before winter arrives and food becomes scarce. Only
a few very large birds in hot countries, such as martial eagles and
Andean condors, grow more slowly.

4 2 weeks
At two weeks old this
barn owl chick is eight
5 3 weeks
The chick is nearly ready to
stand up. It spent its first
6 6 weeks
Feathers are pushing
through the skin, and the
7 8 weeks
Close to being fully
feathered, it practices
8 10 weeks
It is now fully grown
and learning to hunt. It
times heavier than it was at weeks sitting on its ankles. It facial disk is beginning jumping and wing will still rely on its parents
hatching. Then it weighed is covered in thicker down, to appear. flapping in the nest to for a few weeks more
about 0.5 oz (14 g) (see called secondary down, strengthen its muscles. as it learns to hunt
p. 13). At two weeks it and can keep warm It will be able to fly in well enough to
weighs over 3.5 oz (100 g). without its mother. about a week. feed itself.

Unlike many birds, raptor chicks (except “Egg tooth” (p.13)


for owls) have some vision at birth and
can take meat from their mother’s beak
Chicks beg for food,
1 2-DAY-OLD PEREGRINE
At two days, all young birds of prey
rely on the warmth of their mothers to
cheeping and raising
opened mouths to
their parents
survive. They eat meat from day
one. Their parents rip it up
for them until they can rip
it up themselves. In a few
species, parents
2 12-DAY-OLD
PEREGRINE
At 12 days peregrines
regurgitate food start to get a thick
for their chicks. white down. They can
now “thermoregulate”
– they can keep
themselves warm
without the heat from
their mother. Now
she can hunt, with
the male, to feed
the chicks rapidly­
growing appetites.
They can eat half their
own body weight
and more in a day.

Down inadequate to
keep chick warm

14
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Juveniles stay near
the nest while their
parents still feed 4 JUVENILE
PEREGRINE
Most young birds of
Adults lose the buff
edging to the body
feathers and become all
them, then disperse
prey are a different grey on the shoulders
Juvenile coloration color from their
often has a buff parents. This allows
edging them to hunt in the Young peregrines
territory of adult (this one is one
breeding pairs, who year old) usually
would drive out other have vertical bars
adults. Juveniles are or stripes
left alone because they
are no threat until they Horizontal bars

3 SEVEN-WEEK-OLD PEREGRINE
This seven-week-old peregrine is nearly full
grown. Once it has fledged it will be called a
are fully adult and
ready to breed.
and stripes
replace the
vertical ones
juvenile (until it gets its adult plumage). It must then Beak will become of youth
quickly learn to hunt well, or starve. Perhaps 50 per strong enough to
cent of young raptors die in their first year – this tear meat after a
varies with food availability from year to year. In few weeks
temperate climates, many die in their first winter.

5 ADULT PEREGRINE
Some birds, like kestrels, breed before
they are a year old if nest sites and mates are
available. Others, like peregrines, start at
three or four. Very large birds may not breed
until they are six or seven years old. Birds
that are over a year old but still in juvenile
plumage are called subadults.

Characteristic owl ear


hole: a long, thin slit

WHAT AN EARFUL
Owls have bigger ears than other raptors
(p. 51), visible in this two-day-old owl
chick. Like most raptors, adults rip up food
for chicks. A few birds of prey, such as
vultures and snake eagles, regurgitate it –
snake eaglets pull still-writhing snakes
from their parents’ mouths.

Feet are soft and weak at


this stage; chicks spend
their first few weeks
sitting on their ankles

15
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How raptors fly
Airplanes need an engine to push them forward;
only their wings will keep them up in the air. Raptors’
wings provide both the power to go forward and the “lift” to stay up. As
birds flap their wings, the inner part of
the wing provides most of the lift, the The rounder wing
outer part most of the power. The flight of the true hawks,
or accipiters
feathers (p. 21) are specially shaped to
improve the airflow over the wings and FOREST FLYING
Birds of the accipiter family
thus the birds’ flying ability. The tail is (pp. 40–41) have a longer tail
for their body size than
used for steering and for braking: It moves most raptors. It enables
continuously as the bird steers through them to turn fast and stop
Sparrowhawk quickly. Their short,
different air currents. The feathers fan out rounded wings give them
for a fast turn and open out completely as the a fast takeoff speed.
This is vital because
bird slows to a stop. The various wing shapes of they must seize their
different raptors enable the birds of each species to prey before it reaches
cover in the woods.
fly in a way that suits
the terrain in which
they live and to
hunt effectively.

The primary
feathers raised in
takeoff position

The tail is raised


to help the bird
become airborne Tail closed when bird
is flying in a straight
line, opened and tilted
Legs take awhile when turning
to be drawn up
out the way

KING OF THE FALCONS


The Arctic gyrfalcon is the
Powerful legs give largest and possibly the
added power for fastest of all the falcons
thrusting the bird (pp. 58–59). The falcons
forward and have long, pointed wings
upward that are not particularly good
for soaring or gliding,
although they can and do
soar, but are perfect for fast
Wing power comes flying. The narrowness of the
from the breast muscles wing reduces drag in the air
but also makes it harder to
maneuver in wooded areas. The pointed
Falcon wings are suited to wings of the
hunting in wide open country. falcon family

16
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JUST HANGING AROUND
Eagles, such as this black eagle, are designed for Tail fans out to Outer primaries
soaring. They are not able to keep up flapping flight increase lift when have to be very flexible
for long, and they switch to warm air currents to lift them up, bird is soaring
sometimes thousands of feet high, as they watch for prey. It is the
raptor version of going up in an elevator. Most big eagles and vultures
live either in the mountains and along coastlines, where there are lots of
updrafts to soar on, or in hot countries with plenty of thermals (p.18).

Inner primaries
bearing the load The covert feathers
protect the wing
bone, which is very
near the surface

The alula fits in here


when not in use

Alula is raised
when bird is
slowing to a stop

TAWNY EAGLE TAKEOFF


During takeoff, the wings are
raised first, then the legs push
the bird off in a jump. As the
bird jumps, the wings move
forward and downward,
giving the bird lift and
forward motion. This first
downbeat is called the power
stroke. The primary feathers
along the outer part of the
wing (pp. 20–21) do most of
the work on each downstroke,
continuing to give lift and forward
direction. On the upstroke, the primary feathers
open to move upward more easily, and the secondary
feathers on the inner wing maintain the lift.

Large wing area enables condor to


LAZY FLYER glide on air currents rather than
Condor wings are huge, use the more tiring flapping flight
both long and wide.
Condors can soar for hours
on rising air currents, looking
for dead animals. But they
cannot take off easily if full of Large birds BRAKING ALULA
food or on flat land. On the use legs and This red-tailed hawk is in the landing position: Its body
ground, they have to do a feet as air is almost vertical to the ground, rather than horizontal
running takeoff to gain speed brakes in flight as it is when flying. The wing and tail feathers fan out to
before trying to become slow the bird down. At the top of the wings you can see
airborne. In their mountain two “thumbs” standing up; these are the alulas, or “false
homes, however, they simply wings.” All birds have them. They smooth out the
open their wings as they take off airflow above the wings at low speeds and prevent the
from the ledges on which they birds from stalling. The flaps, or slats, on airplane wings
live, and the updrafts do the rest. do the same thing, but not so well.

17
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Styles of flight Diving down
to link toes Once the feet are
All raptors have one of three basic wing shapes. grasped, the birds
Falcons have slim, pointed wings suited to sustained tumble toward
the earth
high-speed flight. Hawks, forest eagles, and other
forest birds have short, rounded wings that enable the
birds to take off quickly and accelerate rapidly but
make fast sustained flight too tiring. Vultures and
other large raptors have long, rounded wings suited
for soaring. But such wings cannot be flapped as
quickly as the shorter wings of hawks and falcons,
so the large raptors are not as fast or as agile.
Bald eagle will turn
upside down to meet
the other bird’s feet GRAB YOUR PARTNER BY THE CLAW
Some birds have spectacular mating flights. Bald eagles
fly really high and then grab the feet of their new
mate-to-be, spiral downward together, then release
one another. Some observers suggest that this flight is
also to drive off unwanted eagles from the new pair’s
territory, so that they are not around to compete for
food when the pair are feeding their chicks.

VERTICAL TAKEOFF
Caracaras are related to the falcons but
don’t have their fast flight. They are,
however, much more agile in the air and
on the ground. They can even take off and
fly vertically for several feet. This may be
done to catch insects they disturb while
scratching through rotten wood. They spend
much of their time on the ground scavenging.
Migratory raptors tend
Bird reaching top of Raptors often glide to avoid large areas of
Birds often circle thermal; thermals from thermal to water because the
ridges, hoping to only last up to a thermal, traveling thermals they rely on
Wings stretched pick up a thermal certain height without tiring do not form over water
back, moving the
bird directly
upward

After pushing the


caracara upward,
the legs dangle

UPWARDLY MOBILE BIRD OF PREY


The most important aids for soaring birds are thermals. A thermal is a column of
warm, rising air. Thermals form as the ground heats up during the course of the day.
They form readily over land, but not over water. Raptors can rise effortlessly in
thermals, which are vital for migration (pp. 56–57), as well as soaring because they
save the birds so much energy. Apart from thermals, raptors’ other main sources of
rising air currents are coastlines and mountain ridges.

18
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Wings beating fast, tail Kestrels have special, very The primaries
starting to fan out as flexible necks that keep take the strain
the bird starts to hover their heads still while their
bodies move slightly

HELICOPTER BIRD
Kestrels specialize in
hovering as they hunt.
They use the wind to
Wing out in the assist them, flying slowly into
upward climb the wind so that their speed and the
wind’s speed cancel each other out.
Hovering enables them to stay still and look for prey
over open country, where there are no perches on
which to sit. A few other raptors, such as buzzards and
snowy owls, also hover occasionally.

Machine sketched by Leonardo da


Vinci, one of the earliest attempts
to invent a flying machine
ROLLERCOASTER LIFE
Raptors looking for a mate often do a beautiful
undulating flight to impress prospective
partners. They fly high, fold their wings and
drop like a stone, open the wings, and pull out
of the dive, climb, then close them again in
another dive. The display can also tell other
birds that the displaying bird has claimed the IMPOSSIBLE DREAM
territory over which it flies and will guard it. People have always longed to fly like
birds, but even if we could make birdlike
wings for ourselves, human muscles are
far too weak, unlike the muscles of birds
Some kestrels, such as (pp. 22–23). By one estimate, we would
this European kestrel, have to have chest muscles 6.5 ft (2 m)
have longer tails for their thick to support our weight.
size than other falcons do

Primaries splayed out


Head thrust forward and tilted for landing
in landing position

Wider secondaries
still providing enough
lift to stay airborne

Landing gear
ready for approach
TAWNY LANDING
Often when a bird is
landing it will drop below
The center two tail the intended perch and glide up
feathers, called to it. When landing from above the
“deck” feathers perch, birds have to put on all the brakes:
The tail fans wide open, the legs are thrown forward,
and the feet are raised. The wings are fanned out as brakes
and the head drops to see where the bird is landing.

19
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Wings and feathers
Birds are the only animals with feathers. Feathers serve two purposes. They allow the bird
to fly and they keep it warm. They are made of keratin, the same fibrous protein as the scales on
reptiles and the hair and nails on mammals. A bird has a variety of different feathers. Most of the
visible feathers are contour feathers. The larger ones are flight feathers, found in the
wings and tail. Underneath are the soft down feathers,
which keep the bird warm. Other feathers have Buzzard
(rear view)
unusual, specialized functions: filoplumes
act like eyelashes, semiplumes like a
cat’s whiskers, and bristles like
brushes for preening
(grooming the
other feathers).

ZIP UP YOUR FEATHERS


Feathers have a central shaft with
a vane on each side. The vanes are
made up of hundreds of tiny barbs
Growing wing (branches) that hook onto each
feathers (left) and tail other to create the feather surface.
feathers (right) of When birds preen themselves, they
Primary feathers young Gabar goshawk use their beaks to zip loose hooks
back together and to re-waterproof
their feathers with oil from
an oil gland at the base
Primary Growing feathers of their backs.
wing full of blood; when
covers fully grown, Vane, made
feathers are dead, of tiny barbs
like human hair

Feather muscle Emerging feather Central shaft


HOW FEATHERS GROW is called the
Feathers grow from Protective quill
underneath the skin, in lines Bump on skin feather sheath
along the bird’s body. While as feather Central shaft If part of the
they are growing they are develops of growing feather under
alive and full of blood. The feather skin damaged
feather is protected at this as it grows, it
stage by a sheath. The . may remain
sheath splits as the feather damaged for
comes out of the skin. The bird’s life
feather unfurls and the bird
preens it into place.

20
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HEAD AND SHOULDERS Flank feathers are KEEPING WARM
A raptor’s head feathers are tiny often colorful Flank and breast feathers
and overlap one another. Neck and have nothing to do with
shoulder feathers tend to be larger. Flank and flying. Their main function
The honey buzzard eats young breast feathers is to keep the raptor warm.
wasps and bee grubs and has Often a bird will puff up its
strong, tiny feathers up to its eyes Quill is feathers to trap a layer of
to protect it from being stung. smaller in warm air underneath. The
As feathers covering the little feathers lower breast feathers drop
lower parts of the bird out in a female bird when
Head feathers get bigger, they SHAPE AND POWER she has eggs, so that the
get softer and The contour body feathers eggs can be kept warm by
less curved give birds their shape. Flight the bird’s skin.
Buzzard relies on the primary and
skeleton secondary flight feathers on
the wings (p. 17). There are 10
Curved body Body feathers
or more primary feathers and Quill is not central in
feathers give 10 to 25 secondary feathers. flight feathers; those
bird its Flight feathers are not at the leading edge of
body shape symmetrical: Their shape the wing are least
improves the airflow over the symmetrical
wings, giving the bird more
lift. The alula, or “false wing”
(p. 17), also improves airflow. Alula
feathers

Inner bone, the


humerus, is short, Quill is more
stout, and strong central farther
Ulna (large bone) A few soft, small down feathers sit from edge of alula
of bird’s forearm under flight and contour feathers
Elbow joint

Secondary feathers
sit along rear edge
of inner wing Contour feathers cover
bony part of wing

Shape of primary
feathers improves
airflow over wing

The thin side


of the primary
feathers faces
forward
Tail feathers must
be very strong
because bird steers
with them in
flight (p. 16)

Tail Condor Primary feathers


feathers feather sit at rear edge of
outer wing and
at end of wing
Merlin TAIL FEATHERS
feather Birds of prey usually have 12 tail feathers. Some have 14.
The tail feathers on the left ranges from a tiny merlin’s
(pigeon hawk’s) to a huge condor’s. Raptors take great
care of all their feathers. Damaged or dirty feathers don’t
work well, and if a bird of prey is not able to fly well, it
will slowly starve to death.

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Inside a bird of prey
Underneath the feathers, raptors have powerful muscles. Under the muscles is that raptors
Eyes are so large
the skeleton. Protected within the skeleton are the internal organs, which enable the cannot move
bird to breathe, to breed, and to draw out the nutrition from its food. Birds have an eyeball within eye
socket; flexible
incredibly efficient respiratory (breathing) system neck compensates
to supply the oxygen they need when they fly.
Their digestive organs are capable of dissolving
Strong but fur, feathers, small bones, and whole insects. The
light skull
totally indigestible parts of prey are coughed back
up as pellets. Because they use up energy so fast,
Neck has 14 vertebrae, allowing the smaller species can starve very quickly. They
bird to twist head all around
and look in every direction
need lots of food to keep up their body
Esophagus: A long,
without moving body temperature, especially in cold weather. thin tube of muscle

Breastbone (sternum): On this model, Crop: Food is stored here;


Inner wing bone (humerus): A very thick and wing muscles are bird does not have to digest
A very strong support; all the strong anchor for the exaggerated for it all at once, so can eat
chest muscles that move the chest muscles extra visibility much without
wing are attached to it indigestion

Muscles linked
to wing bones
by long, light­
weight tendons

Massive breast
muscles give
power for flight
Final vertebrae
are fused and
provide a strong Golden eagle Birds of prey have
support for the tail skeleton highly developed
THE COOL WAY TO BREATHE leg muscles
When birds fly, their muscles
work so hard that they need to
take in huge amounts of oxygen
and to lose heat very fast. Their
breathing system enables them Raptors’ feathers
to do both. The air sacs in birds usually conceal
are not confined to the lungs, as the fact that they
in mammals, but are distributed have long legs
throughout the body, even inside
the hollow bones. When the bird
takes in air, the large number of
Powerful toes that air sacs circulate a lot of oxygen
crush and kill very fast. At the same time, the
air passing rapidly through the
air sacs cools the bird down.

22
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Bones of spine are largely fused, so A PELLET A DAY
little muscle is needed along back All birds of prey produce pellets of
undigested material, such as this,
Weight is concentrated every day or so. Scientists use these
around center of gravity pellets to find out what birds have
Posture of model is been eating. Owl pellets are the most
slightly unnatural revealing because their stomachs are
not as good at digesting small bones
as are the stomachs of diurnal
(day-flying) raptors.

Falcon pellet
Falcons and other
Side view of day-flying raptors
golden eagle’s digest most of the
muscles small bones of their prey

DIGESTION TIME
When birds of prey eat, the meat goes into the crop
first, except in owls, which do not have a crop.
Then it goes into the stomach. There the
unwanted parts, such as feathers, are
packed into a ball to be regurgitated
the next day, and the rest is digested.

Golden eagle model


showing muscles (left)

Golden eagle (right)

POWER LIFTER
Nearly half the weight of a bird of
prey is taken up by its muscles.
The breast, or pectoral, muscles are
the largest. They do the work of
making the bird fly. Because the
big flight muscles are all in the
chest, the wings are kept light
and the weight of the bird is
kept central, making it more
stable in the air. The leg
muscles are also very
powerful, to grip and
crush quarry.

23
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Feet and talons
A raptor’s most important tools are its feet. Their size, shape,
and strength show what it is capable of catching. For example, kites
can be large birds – red kites are about the size of a small eagle –
TALONS AND TOES but their tiny feet only allow them to catch frogs, beetles, mice, and
Talons, which would
be toenails on our feet, young rabbits. The peregrine, on the other hand, is smaller than the
can be huge on large
eagles. In some female
kite but has enormous feet, enabling it to catch birds almost its
eagles, the inner and own size. Vultures have weak feet, because dead animals don’t
back talons can be as
long as your thumb.
struggle very much, whereas the martial eagle of Africa can
catch and kill young ostriches and small antelopes! If you
want to know what a bird of prey eats, look at its feet.

Feathers fanned
out for landing

GOLDEN EAGLE FOOT


Birds, like dogs, walk
This bone is the on their toes. The bird
foot bone, although “foot” has become an
it appears to be extension of the leg. It
part of the leg helps to absorb the
shock of landing and to
push up when taking off.
The ankle is halfway up the
leg. The knee is hidden under
the feathers at the top of the leg.
Falcons’ feet are
large but not
particularly
strong

These bones are Very large


the toes, and back talon
the talons are
the toenails BLACK EAGLE
With its enormous
SAKER FALCON FOOT feet, the African black
Falcons often strike their prey at high speed. eagle, or Verreaux’s eagle,
They even occasionally close the foot into a fist catches the nearest living relative of the elephant!
and punch the quarry. They don’t usually kill It is a much smaller relative. In fact, the rock hyrax
prey with the sheer crushing power of their looks like a giant guinea pig. The eagle’s big, powerful
feet, but may finish the kill with their beaks. feet are ideal for grabbing these very stout, rounded animals.

24
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BLACK VULTURE FOOT OWL FOOT
The New World vultures have feet Most owls except the fishing
more like a big chicken’s than a owls have feathered toes for
bird of prey’s. These feet have very silent flying and landing. Owls,
little grip or power, but they are and ospreys, have reversible
great for standing on all day. The outer toes that can be pointed
feet of Old World vultures are more backward as well as forward.
powerful although still relatively They perch, and grasp things,
weak for raptors of their size. with two toes forward and two
back. The rest of the birds of
Soft feathering on owls’ feet prey perch and grasp with three
and legs helps to keep them toes forward and one back.
warm and silent

Vultures’ talons do not need to When owls’ feet are relaxed, they
be curved because they are used have three talons forward, one back
for walking, not for killing prey

SPARROWHAWK LEG
Sparrowhawks tend to The knee
catch small birds, such joint
as sparrows, hence
AFRICAN FISH EAGLE FOOT their name. They
The osprey and all the fish eagles have very scaly feet, often snatch birds
and when they grasp a slippery fish it from the air. They The ankle
cannot wriggle away. The bottoms have long, thin legs and joint
of their legs are bare, not thin toes, with needle-like
feathered, so they don’t talons, perfect for grasping
have to fly around their small, elusive prey.
with wet feet. Raptors that catch more
powerful prey, such as rabbits and
other sizeable mammals, have
relatively shorter, stronger leg bones.

Talons more
curved than
other eagles’

Long, thin bones


give extra reach

Birds perch and walk on


This foot is larger their toes, not their feet
than a human hand

25
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Hunting techniques
Some raptors that live in open country fly high, survey a wide area, then
swoop fast. Eagles glide down quickly to take prey on the ground, and
Eagle eating falcons dive even faster to catch birds in midair. Harriers hunt differently:
a snake They fly low and slow, looking and listening for quarry in the undergrowth.
Owls tend to do this too. Many raptors, especially those that live in wooded
areas or towns will often “still-hunt,” that is, hunt from perches, sprinting out
from cover when prey comes around the corner. Some – goshawks, for
example – fly close to the ground, using hedges and trees as cover, to
surprise prey. A few birds of prey, such as secretary birds
and caracaras, hunt on the ground. As they
walk along, they flush out prey.

STILL HUNTING
Buzzards, such as this red­
tailed hawk, are very good
at still hunting. A buzzard
will sit and watch and wait
as a rabbit wanders, until
that rabbit strays just too
far from its hole, which is
its last mistake. Birds such
as kestrels that normally
hunt in flight
may still-hunt
when they have
no chicks to
feed, or are
tired, because
still hunting
uses less energy.

Nictitating membrane
(p. 30) often sweeps across
to protect eye as bird attacks

The perch must be inconspicuous;


many raptors have a favorite perch
that they use frequently

Some raptors flit


from perch to perch
as they hunt (p. 40)

Feet can lock onto prey


so powerfully that
sometimes raptors find
it hard to release prey DROPPING IN FOR A BITE
Some birds of prey, like this red-tailed hawk, will
catch anything they come across. The red-tailed hawk,
or red-tailed buzzard as it is called in Europe, will
hunt for small prey like this chipmunk but can also
manage a fully grown rabbit that weighs as much as
the buzzard does. Other raptors, such as the snail kite
(p. 8), eat one particular prey. Individual birds may Tail is spread out
develop their own specialties: Some peregrine falcons to act as a brake
wait on cliff ledges to ambush birds flying past.

26
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FISHING EAGLES
Fish eagles, like this white-bellied sea eagle, and ospreys, fishing
buzzards, and fishing owls live near seas, lakes, and rivers and
catch fish. Except for ospreys, whose hunting technique is all their
own (p. 36), these birds usually sit on a high perch watching the
water for fishes feeding on the surface. A low-angle dive allows
them to plunge their feet into the water and snatch a fish.

Primary feathers fan


out to keep bird from
stalling as it brakes
rapidly

Hawks spot
potential prey

Eagle surveys VIEW TO A KILL One hawk


wide areas as Large eagles (except forest eagles, p. 42) swoops down to
it spirals high need wide, open spaces to fly and flush the prey
on thermals maneuver in as they hunt. They often out of cover
(p. 18) soar, looking for tiny movements, such as
a rabbit flicking an ear or a hare scratching
its side, and then stoop with deadly intent. Other hawks
At other times they may still-hunt. move into
position to
ambush prey
STOOP TO CONQUER
All large falcons inhabit open country. There is
no cover, so their prey can see them far away,
and they may face a long chase to catch it. To
help them get extra speed, they climb high and
stoop (dive) on their quarry when it is far from Quarry
Eagle drops cover. If they miss, they climb and stoop again. driven
down on its quarry into open
ALL IN THE FAMILY
Most raptors are solitary hunters. Sometimes breeding pairs hunt
together. A few species work in teams. Harris’s hawks hunt in
family groups of up to six. Several birds may tackle the prey at once.
If the prey is in cover, one or more birds may try to flush (frighten)
it into the open. Occasionally the birds take turns harassing a likely The kill
prey, until it is confused, exhausted, and helpless. Together the
group can tackle larger prey than one bird could on its own, such as
jackrabbits twice as heavy as the largest Harris’s hawk.

27
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Prey and feeding When a caracara is
upset or excited, blood
rushes to skin above
beak, which turns red

Some raptors will eat anything; others are Empty crop

specialist feeders. The snail kite (p. 8) only eats


snails, and the bearded vulture (left), eats mostly
bones and marrow (the nutritious substance
inside bones). Insects are very important to
many birds of prey: 12 species eat only insects, PICK OF THE CROP
BEARDED WONDER 44 species eat mostly insects, and another 100 All the day-flying birds of prey
Bearded vultures are named for have crops (p. 22). Their food
the beard like feather tufts on species occasionally eat insects. A few birds of goes into the crop when they
their faces. They eat bones.
Small bones they swallow
prey even eat fruit as well as meat; one is the eat and is digested later. As
they eat, the crop gradually
whole, large bones they drop palm-nut vulture, which is named after its bulges out. In most raptors the
onto rocks from about 200 ft
(60 m), sometimes more than
favorite food. The small insect-eating birds must crop is hidden by feathers, but
in caracaras it is bare and looks
20 times, until they break. eat their tiny prey frequently, but many of the very odd when full.
larger birds survive on one or two kills a day and
can spend the rest of their time sitting and digesting. Vultures may have
to look for a long time for food, so they gorge themselves when they
can: an 11-lb (5-kg) griffon vulture can eat nearly 4.5 lb (2 kg)
in one meal. Most birds of prey feed alone or with their
families, but vultures and kites will gather in
large groups at a sizable food source, such
as a dead buffalo or a town dump.

Primary feathers
are black, rest of
bird is white

Black vultures can fold


the feathers up on their
bare necks when they are
cold, or down when they
are feeding so that blood BRING A FRIEND
doesn’t get all over them It is thought that if
Vultures brace themselves black vultures such as
on their strong legs to rip these find a carcass
off tougher pieces to eat whose skin is too
tough for them to
tear open, they will go
and find a larger king
vulture and lead it to
the carcass. The king
vulture rips it open and
feeds, and the black
vultures can eat too.

28
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NOT WELCOME AT THE FEAST
Skin above beak is Some raptors, such as this Cooper’s
usually yellow hawk, “mantle” their food. That is,
they spread their wings out above
it as they eat, hiding it because
many creatures, including other
Full crop; contrast raptors, might try to steal it.
empty crop of Raptors usually carry prey
caracara on left away to a safe place to eat it
if it is small enough to lift.

Wings outspread to hide


food look like a cloak or
mantle, so the action of
spreading them to hide
food is called “mantling”

Caracaras scavenge
dead rabbits and most
other dead creatures Cooper’s hawks
eat small
mammals and
birds, such
as this quail
Egg-shaped stones are
preferred for throwing
at ostrich eggs

SEASONS OF PLENTY
Each year, the bald eagles of North America’s
Pacific coast have a huge banquet as the
salmon come upriver, lay their eggs, and die
(p. 37). Other raptors benefit from occasional
surges in the numbers of their prey, such as
locust and mice plagues. Snowy owls and
rough-legged hawks lay significantly more
eggs when their main prey, lemmings, have a
population explosion. The letter-winged kite
of arid inland Australia does not breed until
the rains are good and its main prey, the
Nostrils, or nares, long-haired rat, is abundant; then it raises
are not see-through in several broods one after the other.
Egyptian and other Old
World vultures, unlike New Pacific salmon die after they have
World vultures (p. 31) spawned (laid their eggs), so the
bald eagles just have to drag
their bodies out of the river

BIRD-BRAIN EXTRAORDINAIRE Ostrich eggs are


Various raptors will eat eggs if the largest eggs
they find them, but Egyptian in the world
vultures are the only ones that use a
tool to do so, and are among the few
known tool-using birds. To break into an
ostrich egg, they pick up small rocks and
throw them at the egg until it breaks open.
Smaller eggs are picked up and thrown at the
ground. In South Africa, where ostriches are farmed
commercially, ostrich farmers shot and poisoned
Egyptian vultures; none breed there anymore. Other
ingenious raptors include bearded vultures. As well as
dropping bones from a height, they also drop
tortoises to break open their shells.

29
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Heads and senses
Hunting other animals is the hardest way
to find your food. One aid for birds of prey is
their excellent eyesight – at least two or three
times as good as ours. In one test, a buzzard
saw small grasshoppers 330 ft (100 m) away; a
EYE STORY
The eyes of a
human could only see them 100 ft (30 m) away. PROTECTIVE EYEBROW
Birds such as the ferruginous hawk have
eurasian buzzard Some species may see even better – up to eight a very obvious eyebrow called the supra­
(skull above) can orbital ridge (p. 11). The ridge may shade
be as big as an times as well as people. Raptors also hear very the eyes from the sun when hunting or
adult human’s well, especially owls (p. 51) and some harriers. protect the eye from injuries when hitting
eyes, although prey or crashing through trees in a chase.
the human The only bird of prey that uses its nose to find
weighs 50 times
as much!
food is the turkey vulture. It’s
EARS AND SPEED
hard to sniff out supper while The ear hole is small but
Nictitating
membrane protects
flying at high speed. important. Sound is used for
calling, recognizing mates, and
and cleans the eye locating prey. Falcons, such as
Rather small the peregrine (skull at left), rely
brain tilts to fit less on hearing than do owls and
into back of skull Hole for the ear, some harriers, which fly slow
normally covered in feathers and low, listening for prey.

THE BEAUTIFUL BITE


Falcons, such as this saker falcon, have
large heads for their size. All falcons
have an extra serration on each
side of the beak. Called the toral
tooth, it is used, with the feet, for
killing quarry. Other birds of
prey do all their killing with
their feet, saving their
beaks for eating.

“Toral tooth” to kill prey


Eyes and beak take
up a lot of room;
brain is not so big

EYE WIPER
The eye of this Verreaux’s eagle
looks clouded over, but there is nothing
wrong. The cloudy surface is in fact a third eyelid
called the nictitating membrane. This membrane is
a tough, clear skin that can flick across the eye and keep it
clean without stopping the bird from being able to see. It is
often closed on impact with prey to protect the eye.

THE USES OF THE TONGUE


The eagle can see Raptors, like dogs, pant to lose heat – as this
at least twice as golden eagle is doing. They breathe through a
far as a human, hole halfway along their tongues. And they use Little is known
probably farther their tongues to hook food back from the tips of about raptors’ sense
their beaks so that they can swallow it. of taste; some captive
birds show definite
likes and dislikes
Brain area of the
GREAT EYES, NO BRAINS bird of prey
It is hard to know exactly how far
an eagle can see. There is no doubt,
however, that a golden eagle can see
a rabbit at least 1 mile (1.6 km) away, HEAD TURNER
and probably much more. Its brain is Birds of prey have such enormous eyes that they
not so impressive. The cleverest birds cannot move them in the sockets. Instead, they
of prey are the vultures. can see all around by turning their heads with
their long, flexible necks. They like to look at
the world from many angles and will even turn
Brown snake eagle skull their heads to look at life upside down.

30
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Young African fish Small Eyes face forward, so that their
eagles have brown brain fields of vision overlap (this is
and white called binocular vision), which
heads; adults’ enables the bird to judge distance
heads are
pure white

This subadult bird’s


head is gradually HUNTERS’ EYES FACE FORWARD
turning white Raptors, such as this black kite, have
forward-facing eyes, like other hunting
animals (including humans). This
gives them the ability to judge
depth and distance, which
is vital for successful
hunting (pp. 50–51).

VOICE OF AFRICA
African fish eagles are very noisy and use
their loud calls to welcome their mates.
Raptors use their voices in many ways, White-backed vultures are not
from chicks begging their parents for food, really bald; the head and neck
to the excited calls made during aggressive are covered in a fine down
encounters, to the softer noises of courtship.

Supra-orbital
ridge
Piercing eye of
vulture scans wide
areas for carcasses,
from high above

NO NEED FOR KNIFE AND FORK


Crest is only
half-extended Vultures, such as this white-backed vulture,
have very strong necks and beaks to help them
tear through the tough skin of large animals. Big
vultures, such as the lappet-faced vulture in Africa and the
Andean condor, can break through the skin of dead buffaloes
and whales! If smaller vultures find such big animals first,
they have to wait for the larger birds to start the feast
before they can join in. The smaller birds’ beaks are
not strong enough to cut through such tough skin.

Turkey vultures are Nares (nostrils)


probably the only raptors are completely
to smell out their food see-through
SENDING SIGNALS
Many birds of prey have a crest. No
one really knows why some birds have
crests, but it may be so that they can
signal their moods to other birds
A NOSE FOR FOOD
of the same kind. A raised crest
The only bird of prey
probably means the bird is
known to have a good sense
angry. Crests vary in length.
of smell is the turkey vulture.
Changeable hawk eagles,
In American forests, it flies
such as this one, have
Thin but very slowly over the tree
short crests.
powerful beak canopy trying to locate dead
animals by smell. Other species
of vulture wait for the turkey
vulture to find food and then
follow it down to eat.
People need aids such
as binoculars; human
sight is far weaker
than that of an eagle

31
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Skeletons
In some birds of prey, the skeleton weighs less than the Wedge-tailed eagles have 14
feathers. For example, the skeleton of a male European cervical (neck) vertebrae
sparrowhawk is only about 11 percent of its total body­
weight. This lightness is necessary if the birds are to fly – The coracoid links
the heaviest flying bird in the world weighs only 35 lb the sternum and
the shoulder area
White-tailed sea eagle (16 kg), and fast-flying, agile birds weigh a fraction of
that. Many of the larger bones are hollow and filled with
air to make them light. At the same time, the skeleton has to be strong
enough to anchor and support the powerful flying muscles and protect
the internal organs. It needs to be rigid enough to hold the muscles
in place yet flexible enough to withstand heavy stresses.
Shoulder muscles are
attached to the scapula

The five thoracic vertebrae,


Lower jaw can only move
in the center of the back above
straight up and down; birds
the synasacrum, are fused
do not chew, they only bite
and rip off chunks of flesh

Bones of pelvis, lower back


vertebrae and most of tail
vertebrae are fused in one
unit of bone, the synasacrum

Sternum
Wedge-tailed
eagle
Knee joint

The caudal (tail)


vertebrae give firm yet flexible
support to the muscles of the tail; Tibia (lower leg bone) fused
the last six vertebrae are fused with some of upper foot
bones in the tibiotarsus
ANCHORS FOR MUSCLES
This is the The four bones of the pectoral (chest)
bird’s ankle girdle anchor the flight muscles: The
shoulder muscles attach to the scapula
(shoulder blades), the breast muscles
BONES TO FLY WITH to the sternum (breastbone) and
Bird skeletons follow the same basic furcula (wishbone). The coracoid, a
pattern as human skeletons, but a special bone, links shoulders and
White-tailed number of the bones are fused, giving breast. This girdle is attached flexibly
sea eagle the rigidity needed to support the to the rest of the body so that it can
flight muscles. The bones of the pelvis move with ease as the bird flies.
are fused to give a strong platform for
the leg and tail muscles.

Most foot bones are fused in


the tarsometatarsus, which
acts as an extension of the
leg (pp. 24–25)

32
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Eyes take up much
more space than
Jaws are light brain does
struts that
support beak

LIKE A HONEYCOMB
Secretary bird skull Although birds’ major bones are hollow,
they are strong, because they have internal
struts across them (above). Such bones are
called pneumatic bones, because they are
filled with air, and some contain air sacs of
Bones of skull are the bird’s respiratory system (p. 22). If a bird
extensively fused, breaks a major wing bone, it can actually
LOOK, MA, NO TEETH protecting head with breathe through the break.
Birds save weight by having no minimum of weight
teeth and light jawbones. They
can do this because “chewing” Sclerotic ring supports
takes place in the gizzard section of the huge eyeball
Egyptian vulture skull
the stomach. The thick, muscular
walls and sandpaper-like inner
surface of the gizzard grind
and break down birds’ food.

Skull is paper-thin
yet very strong

This joint is the bird equivalent Golden


of the human wrist; the bones eagle head
beyond it are equivalent to the Tendons from the main
bones of the hand flight muscles attach to the BETTER THAN A RUBBER NECK
humerus, which is short Humans have seven vertebrae in
and strong to take the stress their necks; birds have from 13 to 25,
depending on the species. This long
neck enables them to preen and
clean virtually their whole bodies. It
also gives them the ability to look
directly behind them.

Bird equivalent The bones that would be hand


to human forearm bones in a human are fused in
Sparrowhawk the last section of the wing
skeleton
The paired clavicles
form the furcula (wishbone) LIGHTER THAN A FEATHER Long, supple neck
In smaller birds the skeleton is very that is supported
fine, paper-thin in places, yet still by a complex muscle
Bird-hunting raptors able to withstand high-speed flight structure, enabling
have particularly long, and high-speed impact as the birds very precise movement
slender toes catch their prey. This skeleton weighs
less than the sparrowhawk’s feathers.

33
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Neck tucked into
ruff of feathers to
keep warm Vultures
V
ultures are the garbage collectors, or
scavengers, of the raptor world. They prevent disease by
eating dead animals before they decay. In Africa, they eat far
more meat than all other predators put together – an estimated
27,500 tons (25 million kg) each year on the Serengeti plains
alone. Vultures, especially big vultures, are good at soaring but bad
at flapping flight (pp. 16–19), so most live in hot places or in
mountainous areas. There are two separate groups: New World vultures
in the Americas and Old World vultures elsewhere. Both groups range
from huge birds of 22 lb (10 kg) or more to small species of only 4–7
10-ft (3-m)
lb (2–3 kg). The largest, condors, have 10-ft (3-m) wings.
wingspan
New World vultures urinate over their
legs and feet, perhaps to cool themselves
CONDORS Wings outstretched
The Andean condor Juveniles have to keep its balance
(above) soars above dark brown
the Andes mountains plumage, adults
of South America. Some glide right have white
across to the Pacific coast and scavenge
dead whales. The California condor Bright yellow
(p. 59) recently became extinct in the face; neck not
wild, but birds bred in captivity are now bare, unlike
being released to re-establish the species. most vultures

NEW WORLD
The turkey vulture is
the smallest of the New
OLD WORLD World vultures and has the Turkey
Old World vultures are related largest range (lives over vulture gets
to kites and eagles, whereas the widest area). It is found its name from
New World vultures are related from southern Canada to its red face
to storks, and only distantly to Argentina. It has a better
the other birds of prey. The sense of smell than other
smallest of the Old World birds of prey (pp. 30–31), Neck feathers can be
vultures are Egyptian vultures which it uses to sniff out pulled down like a ruff
(above). There are two kinds: dead animals in the when the bird is hot or
HOME WITH A VIEW The Indian race has yellow forests and woodlands. feeding, and pulled
Many vultures breed in the mountains beaks and the European and up when it is cold
where predators cannot reach them, as at African races have black beaks.
Vulture Rock in Spain (above). Some
species nest alone in caves, others in New World vultures
large groups called colonies. The tail sticks up when it have chicken-like feet
is doing its bouncing walk

The dropped head can


mean different things,
including aggression

34
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DINNER PARTY: NO JACKET REQUIRED
Vultures gather in dozens to eat large carcasses.
In Africa up to six different species may gather at
once, plus rival scavengers such as marabou
storks. Some vultures appear to be there for
social reasons and don’t actually eat. A large
group of vultures can strip an antelope carcass
bare in 30 minutes, and a cow in three hours.

Eurasian
griffon skull

Marabou storks Upper mandible


eat dead meat fixed to the skull
WATCHER IN THE SKY
Vultures have excellent (daylight) eyesight.
As they soar, they watch for signs of death,
and watch one another. If one bird starts to
drop, its neighbors will follow, then their
neighbors, and so vultures can come in
from nearly 200 miles (300 km) away to a
carcass. Eurasian griffons such as this Lower mandible moves,
belong to the family of Old World vultures much like our jaw
called griffon vultures, or just griffons. COMMON BUT CLEAN
White-backed vultures are the most
Huge wings give vultures A white-backed vulture common in Africa. They have bare
their soaring ability can eat 22 lb (1 kg) of heads and necks, like most vultures,
meat in two minutes because they put their heads inside
carcasses. Feathered heads would
get very dirty. All vultures love to
bathe and, after they have fed, will
fly long distances to wash.

THESE FEET WERE MADE FOR WALKING


Some vultures like to walk. In fact, the
American black vulture (below) literally
bounces along on strong legs. When
hunting for small dead animals, like
crabs or baby turtles, it spends much of Black vultures can
its time on the ground. Black vultures’ run or bounce along
legs and feet have evolved to make them at quite a fast rate
more sure-footed than
other vultures.

35
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Ospreys and fish eagles
Ospreys are unique. Found in most parts of the world, they are
perfectly adapted for catching fish, and eat almost nothing else. To help
them grip their slippery food, their talons are extra-curved, and they have
scales on the soles of their feet and specially adapted toes (p. 24). They
soar high above the water to spot their prey, then dive steeply down to
seize it, and they are the only raptors that will go completely underwater
to catch a fish. The eight species of fish eagle are not so specialized. They
do catch fish, and, like ospreys, have extra-curved talons and scaly soles to
their feet. But they also scavenge a lot, and will eat just about anything
BORN TO FISH
Ospreys have long legs for they can find or catch. Unlike ospreys, fish eagles usually catch fish by
catching fish under the water “still-hunting” – quietly sitting and waiting for fish to swim by, then diving
and their outer toes can be
swung backwards to hang on (at a shallower angle than ospreys) and dipping their feet into the water to
to slippery prey better (p. 25).
Their plumage tends to be
scoop up a surface-swimming fish. Fish eagle species include the bald
more waterproof than other eagle and the huge Steller’s sea eagle.
raptors’. They can even close
up their noses to keep water
from rushing in. Osprey’s wings sweep SYMBOL OF AMERICA
back in the final dive The bald eagle was chosen
into the water as the national emblem of
the United States in
1782. Benjamin Franklin,
statesman and scientist,
disapproved of the
choice because bald
eagles steal food from
others. He believed the
turkey should become
the emblem. The eagle
won the day. In recent
ARC OF A DIVER decades it became
Ospreys usually take fish close to the water surface. They can Fish is held with endangered as a result of
plunge into the water, however, leaving only the tips of their its nose facing persecution and pollution.
wings showing. They soar, circle, and even hover over water as the front to Great efforts were made to Other foot
they look for quarry, then dive in, throwing their feet forward reduce drag save the symbol of the Eagle holds holds arrows to
to snatch the fish. After resting a few moments on the water, nation, and the species is olive branch to symbolize war
they pull out with strong, horizontal wing beats. now much recovered. symbolize peace
Ospreys have narrow
heads, with no bony
ridges above their eyes

Sturdy nests
withstand storms
on exposed coasts

FAMILY HOME
Ospreys use the same nest year after
year, and even generation after VARIED DIET
generation. It can become very big as The white-bellied sea
it is added to each year. All eagle lives along the coasts
sorts of materials are added of India, southeast Asia,
to it, even bones, old and Australia. As well as
rope, cardboard, and These eagles have fish, it hunts rabbits,
plastic bags, although loud and raucous voices fruit bats, gulls,
these can entangle water birds, even
and kill the growing poisonous sea
young. Some snakes. In some
ospreys nest in places it now
reed beds, or on suffers from the
the ground on effects of the
treeless islands. lethal pesticide
DDT (p. 13).

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WAITING FOR THE FEAST
Every year, Pacific salmon swim upriver, lay
their eggs, and die, and bald eagles gather
to feed (p. 29) on them. It is possible to
see 2,000 of them on one river in Alaska in
this season. Fish eagles’ broad wings
enable them to fly carrying prey heavier
than they are. Bald eagles can carry 7 lb
(3 kg) salmon, and one even flew away
with a 15 lb (7 kg) deer. Steller’s sea eagles
can probably carry even heavier loads.
The eagles just sit Steller’s sea eagle is
THE EAGLE HAS LANDED, AGAIN and wait for the instantly recognizable
The white-tailed sea eagle is one of the largest species of salmon to die by its enormous beak
eagle. It has been hunted and persecuted by humans for THE BIG-BEAKED BIG BROTHER
centuries. The last white-tailed sea eagle in Great Britain Steller’s sea eagles are the largest of all the fish-
was shot in 1916 and the species became extinct there. eating birds of prey. They live on the coast of
Gradually, people have become more aware of Russia and China and feed mainly on Pacific
their responsibilities to the environment, and salmon. They will also catch large birds, such
in the 1960s white-tailed sea eagles as geese, mammals such as hares, and even
were released into the wild on young seals. Like all fish eagles, Steller’s
a remote Scottish island. sea eagles lay two to three eggs and
The bird is still rare rear more than one young per
in Britain, but its clutch (unlike some of the
numbers are true eagles, p. 12).
growing.

Supra-orbital
ridge

This juvenile bird


does not yet have the
full adult plumage

Powerful beak can


tear through tough
Sea eagle fish skin with ease
swallows bones Tail slowly
with the flesh Strong feet with turns white
rough scales hold as eagle reaches
the slippery catch adult breeding age

Salmon is the
favorite food
of many
northern
eagles

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Kites and harriers Male drops
food to female

Kites are very graceful fliers, easily recognized in flight by


their forked tails. There are 33 species. The largest, the European
red kite, weighs 12 times as much as the smallest, the South
AEROBATIC LUNCH
Swallow-tailed
American pearl kite, which weighs about 3.5 oz (100 g). Many of The male harrier does
kite in flight the smaller species eat insects, others hunt for larger quarry, some not usually bring food
to the nest. Instead, he
are scavengers, and some even fish. The 13 species of harriers, and calls to the female,
three related species, all have huge wingspans and light bodies, which allow who flies to meet him.
He flies over her and
them to fly very slowly while looking and listening for potential prey. All tend drops food, which she
to live in open areas: marsh, grasslands, or farmed land. catches with her feet
and brings back to
the nest while he
African harrier hunts again.
hawk has a large
crest and bare face

Color of back
feathers is different
for juveniles
and adults
Harriers often nest in
reeds, tussocky grass,
or even standing crops

NO HIGH-RISE HERE
Most harriers build nests on the ground,
like the marsh hawk above. The females
ADAPTABLE BIRD make the nest with sticks, dry reeds,
Black kites are found in many areas of and grass. Harriers usually lay three
the world (p. 58). They have a varied to four eggs but can have up to
diet, including mice, rats, fish, frogs, ten when food is plentiful.
insects, small birds, and carrion. Like Kites usually build Long thin legs and
many kites, they fly in large flocks where messy nests toes are ideal for
food is abundant, but nest alone. Like all in trees. pushing into cracks
kites, they often catch food in midair, and holes to find food
eating it from their feet as they fly.

38
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CLOSE RELATIONS
RAPTOR RESEMBLANCES Yellow-billed kites are the
The African harrier hawk and its faraway relative, the African subspecies of the
crane hawk of South America, are medium-sized black kite. They are a
raptors that resemble the harriers. They, too, have slightly different color and
huge wings and low body weight. They fly very have a yellow bill (beak).
slowly through woodlands, looking for tree
holes or rock crevices to raid. The harrier
hawk group has double-jointed legs. The
ankle can bend either way as the
hawk gets its talons into a hole to
snatch a baby bird out of its nest
or some other creature out
of its hiding place. Kites can twist
and turn in an
amazing fashion

Most kites have a


forked tail; in some
species, much more
forked than this

Red kite has


a pale iris

Harriers sometimes fly


at a height of less than
3 ft (1 m) as they hunt SUCCESS STORY
In developed countries, a
number of raptors
suffered huge declines in
recent decades due
largely to pesticides and
SLOWLY DOES IT other features of modern
Harriers hunt by flying farming. A number of
low and slow over marsh, these species have
moor, and grasslands, recovered greatly. The
methodically zigzagging to red kite was once the
cover all the ground over most common kite in
which they are hunting. They Britain, then was reduced
listen for sounds in the grass – to a small, declining
some even have a facial population in Wales. It
disk to sharpen their sight has now been
and hearing, like owls. reintroduced into England
They eat prey up to the and Scotland, and is thriving.
size of a small rabbit.

Large flocks of kites


will scavenge for food
in town dumps

Reddish color of
feathers gives this
species its name

NOT FUSSY, OR FEARFUL


Kites are not afraid of humans –
in Africa, some have learned
to snatch sandwiches from
people’s hands. Kites will go
into town dumps and garbage
heaps to find scraps to eat.
However, they run the risk of
picking up poisonous food,
Long tail aids slow flying or getting bits of plastic or
string caught around them. Kites are easy to
identify in flight
by their forked tails

39
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Hawks and buzzards LOOK AT THOSE LEGS
There are about 20 species
of buzzards, or buteos,
around the world,
including the long-legged
True hawks (genus accipiter) are fast-flying and buzzard (left). All buzzards
are stocky, with thick legs

North American
very agile, with short, rounded wings that help and powerful feet, because
they mainly catch
Swainson’s them twist and turn through trees as they chase mammals (p. 25). For most
after quarry. They also have long tails that help
hawks, like other
hawks, often hunt
buzzards, rabbits and
rodents are the main prey.
from man-made in steering and act as brakes, enabling
perches such as
telephone poles
them to stop quickly. Buzzard
hawks (genus Buteo) are very
adaptable birds. They live and hunt in a
wide range of environments, especially
part-wooded and cultivated land.
They are less agile than accipiters,
with longer, broader wings and
shorter tails. They scavenge
where they can and take
a variety of prey. Like all
buzzards, they soar a lot,
watching out for food
from high in the sky.

Hawklike wings and tail give great


agility, but Harris’ hawks tend to
BEST OF HUNTERS
fly more slowly (and use their
In medieval Europe, the goshawk, a true hawk,
brains more) than true hawks
was known as the “cook’s bird,” not because it was
Sparrowhawk plucks
flown by cooks but because it caught so much food
feathers from blackbird
for the larder. Sparrowhawks were less popular
before eating it
because they catch smaller prey, but were still
DON’T EAT THE FEATHERS
flown. Buzzards were probably
Like many other raptors, hawks pluck the feathers from
used to train apprentice
their prey before eating. They often have “plucking
falconers, as buzzards
posts” near their nests, where they take their kill. True
are slower than
hawks are divided into the (larger) goshawks and the
hawks, and
(smaller) sparrowhawks. There are about 20 species of
easier to
goshawk, and about 25 species of sparrowhawk.
train.
Goshawks hunt both “fur and feather” – both
mammals and birds; sparrowhawks usually
catch small birds. Hawks often hunt by
flitting from perch to perch, skimming
the ground between trees so that
prey will not spot them.

Harris’s hawks have


relatively short
primary feathers

Hawks can take relatively


big prey: female sparrowhawks Hawks often use hedges and
catch wood pigeons, which are trees as cover as they fly toward
heavier than they are, as well prey, only “breaking cover” and
as blackbirds such as this showing themselves at the last
moment

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False wing helps with
HAWK OR BUZZARD? stopping and low-
The Harris’s hawk is an unusual bird because it falls speed flight (p. 17)
between the hawk and buzzard families. Its scientific
name is parabuteo, which means “like a buzzard.” It
has the characteristic hawk shape, with long
FEEDING THE KIDS tail and short, rounded wings. It resembles
Numbers of Eurasian buzzard (above) rise buzzards in its relaxed temperament
and fall with prey populations. In Britain, (hawks tend to be high-strung). It
the number of breeding buzzards fell is unusually sociable. It hunts
dramatically when the disease myxomatosis in groups (p. 27) and breeds
killed off most rabbits, then rose tenfold in cooperatively: Parents are
12 years as rabbit numbers recovered. helped in rearing chicks
by other Harrises in
the group.

Harris’s hawks are also


called bay-winged hawks
because of the brown color
on the top of their wings

The mammal-hunting hawks


have strong legs; the smaller
sparrowhawks, which prey on
birds, have thinner, less strong
legs with very long toes

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Eagles
Around the world the eagle is seen as the
king of the birds. Many kings, nations, armies,
and empires have taken eagles as their
symbols. There are over 40 species of eagle,
and several distinct groups. The forest eagles
include the crowned eagles of Africa,
Philippine eagles (p. 56), and South American
CHILD SNATCHER?
harpy eagles (p. 59), which are probably the
Many eagles eat carrion. Some most powerful of all raptors. The true eagles
have been seen feeding on
prey much bigger than live in open country. Some, such as golden
anything they could kill. This eagles, wedge-tailed eagles, and martial eagles,
is why myths developed about
eagles carrying off calves, can have wingspans of over 8 ft (2.5 m). Forest
sheep, and even human
babies. For all the stories of
eagles have shorter, more rounded wings and
eagles carrying off children, longer tails than true eagles. Snake eagles have
there is no verified record of
any eagle killing a child.
thick scales on their legs and feet, that protect
them from snakebite, and short,
JUNGLE EAGLE
Most forest eagles belong to the
strong toes that enable them to
subfamily of hawk eagles. The grasp the snakes.
African hawk eagle (right) is one.
Hawk eagles are so called because COMMON PIRATE
their shape is similar to that of Tawny eagles are among the most
hawks. Like hawks, they can turn numerous of eagles. Like many other
very fast and so can hunt amid thick eagles, they mainly scavenge, eating
trees. Sadly, a number of hawk eagles from carcasses and even human
are becoming rare as the forests that garbage. They often act as “pirates,”
they live in are steadily cut down. chasing other raptors that have just
caught prey and stealing it.
Striped breast feathers act as
camouflage when eagle sits in trees All true eagles have
feathers down to
their toes, as do
some forest eagles

Eagles that
have feathers Eagle spreads wings to Warthog is
down to their make itself look larger defending its baby
toes are sometimes and more threatening from the eagle
called “booted eagles“

IMPERIAL SYMBOL
Eagles have been the symbols of many
great empires, including ancient Rome,
the Russia of the Czars, and the
Austrian Hapsburg empire. Roman
legions used to carry eagle standards
as their symbols and rallying points
(above). To lose the legion’s BABY WARTHOG SNATCHER
eagle was the worst of Birds often pick The giant martial eagle (above), the biggest in Africa, is powerful
all possible disasters. a dead branch enough to kill jackals and small antelopes, let alone baby warthogs.
high up as a Martial eagles, which live on the plains of Africa, are among the
lookout point largest of all eagles. Some have wingspans of over 8 ft (2.5 m).
Forest eagles never have as big wings as the biggest of the true
eagles. They have to maneuver through jungles or forests at high
speed as they hunt, so have shorter wings and longer tails.

42
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FAMILY HOME
Golden eagle pairs return to the
Nictitating
same nest sites year after year to
membrane
raise their young (right). Only
protects and
bald eagles build larger nests (p.
cleans eye
13). Good nesting sites stay in
use: When one pair stops
breeding, another uses the
nest. Golden eagles reach
maturity at five, coming
into adult plumage,
ready to breed.

Chicks cheep to stimulate


Brown plumage of their mother to feed them
young bateleur
changes gradually Golden eagle gets its name from the
into adult plumage (relatively) gold-colored feathers
on the back of its head and neck

ACROBAT OF THE AIR


A dull brown juvenile bateleur eagle
(above) grows into a brightly colored
adult (left), reaching maturity at seven.
Bateleurs are closely related to the
snake eagle family but eat mainly
carrion. They were given the name
bateleur, which in French means
balancer or tightrope walker,
because they are so
acrobatic in the air.

Fork halfway
along tongue helps
bird to pull food
back into its throat

RELIGIOUS RAPTOR
The eagle is a religious symbol
in many cultures, including the Some golden eagles
North American Indian. In have wingspans of
some religions an eagle more than 2.5 m (8 ft)
represents the sun or a god
– often a sky god. In
Christianity the eagle Contour feathers (p. 21)
came to be a symbol of give shape to wing
John the Evangelist
(above), one of the
first disciples of
Jesus Christ. Golden eagles help
farmers by killing rabbits
Stocky build is and other animals that
characteristic of damage crops
golden eagles

MODERATE EATER
Golden eagles live in the tundra areas of the
This 4.5 lb (2 kg) northern hemisphere. Like most eagles, they
rabbit will last the kill prey much smaller than they are, although
9 lb (4 kg) eagle they may feed off large dead animals. The
for two days biggest exception is Africa’s crowned eagle.
Crowned eagles have been known to kill
antelopes weighing up to 45 lb (20 kg).

43
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The secretary bird Two-week-old
secretary bird

Secretary birds have been described as long­ The same bird at


six weeks old
legged marching eagles. Their long legs make
them look almost like storks, but they have the
hooked raptor beak and, like all birds of prey,
THE REASON FOR THE NAME
they kill with their feet. They live in Africa
One story is that the long south of the Sahara, in almost every region that
feathers on secretary birds’
heads were reminiscent of
can offer them grasslands, desert edges, or
European secretaries with farmed land in which to live. They also need
quill pens behind their ears
(above). Or the name may a flat-topped tree to nest in. About 4 ft (1.2 m)
come from the Arabic high, they weigh 4.5–9 lb (2–4 kg), and have a THE YOUNG SECRETARY BIRD
saqr-tair – “hunter bird.” When first hatched, young secretary birds have huge heads.
wingspan of 6.5 ft (2 m) or more. They cannot Their legs grow so fast that the scales can’t keep up, and in the
live in forests because it is too tricky for them to take off and fly amid first few days the old scales split off and new scales grow again
and again. They cannot stand up until almost full-grown, which
the trees, and they avoid very thick, tall grass. They flush prey out by means that they cannot fall out of the nest until ready to fly, or
walking, not flying, through the long African grass, and then they kill at least glide. Secretary birds are valuable to farmers because
they kill rodents and poisonous snakes. Most African nations
it by stamping on it, with great force and accuracy. Famous for killing have laws to protect them, but some people hunt them illegally.
snakes, they also eat a wide variety of insects, small animals, and birds.
44

Long quill-like
Eyelashes are longer crest feathers
than any human’s Primary feathers are
black; secretary birds
can fly and soar very
well when they want to

Facial skin becomes


bright orange as
bird matures

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Locust
Egg
Chick

Mouse Lizard Crest not raised, quill


feathers down
BUFFET LUNCH The two center tail
Snakes are only a small part of a secretary bird’s diet. feathers are twice as
The bulk of its food consists of insects such as long as all the rest
grasshoppers, locusts, and large beetles. It also Crest raised, quill
catches lizards, hedgehogs, mongooses, birds, rats, feathers up
mice, and other mammals up to the size of a small SLIDES DOWN NICELY
hare. Also on the menu are eggs and baby birds. All Secretary birds eat snakes the way
but the largest items are swallowed whole. they eat most of their prey: They
swallow them whole. Snakes take
longer to go down than their
other quarry – they are slowly
sucked in. Secretary birds have a
unique method of killing prey
but, as with all raptors, it involves
their feet. They stamp on their
DOMESTIC BLISS quarry, repeatedly if necessary.
Secretary birds will not even attempt to When killing insects, they hit
breed unless the food supply is plentiful. with any part of the foot, but
45

They lay two to three eggs, but usually when tackling snakes, they strike
only one chick survives. In some pairs, with the back talon at the snake’s
both parents take turns incubating the head, its most vulnerable yet also
eggs, whereas in most raptors the female most dangerous part.
TILL DEATH DO US PART does all the incubating. When sitting on
Once secretary birds have found a mate, they the nest, they often crouch very low and
usually stay together for life. Unlike most raptors, are invisible from the ground.
they live in their nest together all year, not just
when breeding. The paired birds tend to stay
within sight of each other during the day, Scales protect the
hunting, walking, and flying together unless HIGH-RISE living long, powerful legs
the female is brooding eggs or young. They Secretary birds are against snakebites
sleep lying down together at night. Other big and clumsy. They
raptors that mate for life include bald eagles, build huge, sloppy
golden eagles, African fish eagles, ospreys, nests on top of flat­
and peregrine falcons. topped trees. Acacia
trees are the favorite. Back toe used when
First the birds trample striking snakes’ heads
the treetop until it is
completely squashed, then
Grass snake they add sticks and twigs to
disappearing down make a platform, which can
secretary bird’s throat; be up to 8 ft (2.4 m) across.
a good supper Tufts of grass and reeds are
carried up to make a soft lining
for the eggs to lie in and the
chicks to grow in. Some nests
are used year after year
until they collapse or are
stolen by other raptors.

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


The falcon family Game bird being
struck in midair

The big falcons – sakers, lanners, peregrines, and


gyrfalcons – are probably the fastest-flying of all the
birds of prey, and when they stoop (dive), the fastest
The hobby is a small
birds in the world (p. 58). They live in open country, Falcon stoops past
falcon, so agile it can such as desert edges, tundra, moor, and grasslands. after strike but will
turn to grab the prey
catch swifts in midair
There are also various smaller true falcons, including
CATCHING PREY
kestrels. Forest falcons are small, little-known birds that live in Many falcons catch their prey by
tropical rainforests. The smallest members of the falcon family, flying high above it, stooping down
at high speed behind it, and then
and the smallest raptors of all (p. 58), are pygmy falcons. striking it in midair. Sometimes a
Caracaras don’t look or behave much like falcons, but they falcon will grasp the prey in the air.
This is called “binding to it.” Often
belong to the same family (p. 11). They come from Latin the falcon will hit the prey as it
America and spend much of their time on the ground, dives past, then either pick up the
dead bird on the ground or catch it
scratching under logs and stones searching for food. in midair before it hits the ground.

Caracaras have a
different wing shape stripes OF YOUTH Notch, or tooth,
from that of falcons A falcon’s juvenile on falcon’s beak
plumage has downward
vertical stripes on the
chest, and the shoulders
and back feathers have buff edging.
This plumage usually goes in the first
THE ODD RELATIVES molt, but it allows the bird to hunt
Caracaras may not behave much in adult territory before it grows
like falcons, but scientists tell us adult plumage (p. 15).
that they are closely related. Falcons born in hot
Rather than hunting in the air, countries often look
they scavenge like vultures. much paler than
They are clever birds and those hatching in
will often annoy campers cooler ones because
in the Andes by stealing the sun bleaches
food from their camps. out the color in
the feathers.

Heavily striped breast


of immature lanner

Juvenile
male lanner
FLYING HUNTER
Lanners live in some parts Adult
of Europe and the Middle male lanner
East, and all over Africa
except for the rainforest
and the Sahara. They catch
small birds in the air and
Spots of adult
also insects, small
plumage
mammals, and reptiles.
They are numerous in
Africa but rare in Europe. A
program in Israel to breed
them and release them
into the wild is doing well.

Short tail means


falcons can’t
maneuver as
well as hawks Side view of
juvenile to show
back feathers
Side view of
adult to show
back feathers

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Peregrine falcon
nesting on a
cliff ledge

CHOOSING A HOME
Like owls, falcons don’t
build nests. Smaller Kestrels are a
falcons and forest common sight in BIRD ABOUT TOWN
falcons use abandoned many towns Kestrels, and some other
nests or holes in trees. falcons, have learned that
Larger falcons tend to high-rise buildings are a
use ledges on cliffs, little like cliffs, with ledges
rocks, or buildings. They and alcoves that make good
build scrapes in the soil nesting places. They have
TAKING TIME TO LOOK AROUND
or dirt on the ledge, also learned that where
The 13 species of kestrel around the world are all
then lay their eggs. humans live, so do many
Young members of able to hover (p. 19), some better than others. This
other animals that the
the rarest species of enables them to “perch” in midair, giving them
falcon can use as a food
falcon in the world, time to spot small animals on the ground. Other
source. There are problems,
the Mauritius kestrel falcons are flying swiftly past on their way to
though – young birds may
catch birds, so the kestrels have less competition
get run over before they
for snatching ground prey.
learn to deal with traffic.

UNISEX FEATHERS? This dark bar


In some raptors, males and females is called the
NOWHERE TO fly TO mustachial strip
Mauritius kestrels almost have differently colored plumage.
became extinct recently, mainly Usually the difference doesn’t
because of the destruction of show until the birds have their
the forests on their home adult plumage. American kestrels, or
island. A breeding and sparrow hawks, are one exception:
release program has saved The difference is obvious as
them, for the time soon as they have feathers.
being. Small This sub-adult female
populations of any lanner (left) is pretty
raptor are always much the same color
vulnerable, as a subadult male.
especially if The only real
they live on difference is that
islands (p. 59). the female is
usually about a
third heavier
than the male.
This is about
Contour average for
feathers have falcons (p. 9).
buff edges in
immature Adult
plumage female lanner

Subadult Crop area is often


female lanner less marked than
the lower breast

INDIVIDUAL MARKINGS
You can tell a lot about a bird from
its feathers. Within each species, there
is a certain amount of variation in
plumage. Individuals differ, and in
many species so do birds from different
regions. Some lanners are more heavily
Juvenile stripes marked than others and some have a
are lost in the redder color to the back of the head.
first molt, after Adult lanners from southern Africa
which the bird is have a pink breast with no
subadult (p. 15) markings; northern lanners tend
to be very heavily marked.

Falcons’ toes
are even Tail feathers are
longer than used in steering,
hawks’ toes and as brakes

47
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Owls Baby owls are soon
able to swallow their
food, such as this
mouse, whole

When the night comes, owls take over


from the other raptors. They hunt by stealth,
flying slowly, softly, silently to
surprise their prey. They rely
on their ears more than their
eyes to catch their prey. Most,
though not all, are night
(nocturnal) hunters, or hunt at dawn and
dusk. They range in size from the tiny elf owl
of the U.S., which weighs only 1.4 oz (40 g),
up to the eagle owl of Europe, which is a
MIDNIGHT HOWLER massive 6.5 lb (3 kg). Most owls rest during
The tawny owl has the most
famous of owl calls in
the day. Their feathers are in dull colors to
Europe – “too-witt-too-woo.” camouflage them from possible predators in
It also makes a shrill “kee­
wick” noise late at night.
the day and from possible prey at night. The
Like many other raptors, it different groups of owls hunting at night
likes to catch its prey by still­
hunting (pp. 26–27): It sits fill all the hunting roles of the diurnal
very still and quiet, listening (daytime) birds of prey except for
and looking for movement,
then it pounces. scavenging (carrion is hard to see
at night) and the fast flying
and diving of the falcons.
SILENT EAGLE OF THE NIGHT All feathers are
Owls fly on large, silent wings. Their covered in a fine
feathers have a fine down all over, and down to aid
the leading edges of the outer flight silent flight
feathers are serrated like a comb. This
gives a soft, frayed fringe that deadens
the noise of their wingbeats so that prey
don’t hear them coming. Owls are not
particularly fast or agile fliers;
they rely on surprise as they
float through the night. The
largest of all owls are the Breast feathers give
various Eagle owls. warmth in cold weather;
their mottled coloring
Bengal provides camouflage
eagle owl
Eagle owls have feathered
toes, which help protect
their feet from bites

HOOTING BOOBOOK
The boobook owl gets its
name from the hooting noise it
makes. Several other kinds of
owls are named after the sounds
they make. For example, there is
a screech owl, and even an owl
called a saw-whet owl, which
is said to make a noise like a
saw being sharpened. Owls
call to attract mates or
mark out their territory.

Boobook owl’s
coloring serves
as camouflage
during the
daytime

48
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Baby owls are
covered in a fluffy Barn owls help
down to keep them farmers by killing
warm mice and rats

FARMER’S FRIEND
Barn owls are a little different from other owls: They have a more
pronounced facial disk (p. 51), enabling them to have even better sight and
hearing and making them particularly nocturnal. There are about 12
species, found around the world. They often live on farms because there
BABY OWLS are lots of mice and rats to hunt. They are
Baby owls, such as these eagle owls, can known for living in barns, but any place
often be of very different sizes in the same secure, weatherproof, and quiet will do –
brood. The mother bird starts sitting on the on top of bales of hay, in hollow trees,
eggs almost as soon as she has laid the first even on the ground.
one, so there can be a large gap between the
oldest baby and the youngest. This is
called asynchronous hatching.
Owls grow a little more
slowly than other birds
of prey of similar size.

Snowy owl’s white


feathers camouflage
it in snow

DAYTIME OWL
Most owls prefer to hunt at night, or at
dawn and dusk, but many also have to
hunt in the day when raising chicks. The
snowy owl and other owls that live
in the Arctic have no choice
about daylight flying: In
the summer the days
are so long there
Owl’s huge eye is no night.
is vulnerable
to damage Secondary feathers
Primary feathers

ON THE DEFENSIVE
Owls can be very fierce when defending For many owls, a vole
themselves or their nests. To make themselves such as this is a
look fierce, they spread their wings and turn favorite food
them around so the back faces the front (left).
This makes them look much bigger than they
really are. The pearl-spotted owlet has two
white patches on the feathers at the back
of its head. The patches look like eyes and
stare out at any potential hunter.

DOWN IN ONE
Owls, more than other raptors, like to
swallow their prey whole if it is small
enough. Most owls eat rodents,
especially rats, mice, and voles.
Many owls, especially small ones,
live on insects. Fishing owls eat
fish; spectacled owls eat crabs;
eagle owls catch rabbits, hares,
and even day-flying raptors
as they rest at night.

49
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The life of owls WISE AS AN OWL
Owls have been thought
Owls do not build their own nests. They use of as being very wise
holes in trees or abandoned buildings or barns, since the time of
even bridges – or they take over abandoned ancient Greece. The
owl was associated
nests. One species, the ferocious great horned with Athena, the
owl, sometimes even takes over inhabited hawks’ Greek goddess of
nests, killing the occupants. Owls tend to be wisdom. In some parts
SITTING PRETTY fairly secretive birds. They hide during the day of the world, owls are
Owls, such as this scops because other birds might attack them, knowing birds of ill omen because
owl, perch differently from other of their link with the night.
raptors (pp. 24–25). Some owls that owls may kill them at night as they sleep.
have very strong feet: Eagle Even tiny birds like chickadees harass them and
owls can kill hares, and the feet try to drive them away whenever they are seen.
of one Australian owl earned it Crows and magpies will kill owls if they can. Eagle owl
the name the powerful owl.
skull
THE EYES OF A HUNTER
Owls have huge eyes at the front of their heads, as do
Owl pellets other hunters, such as lions and humans. Because
their eyes are close together, hunting animals have
binocular vision (p. 31). This means that they can
judge depth and distance very well – vital when
hunting. Their field of vision is, however, limited.
Vegetarian animals, in contrast, which do not need to
hunt, usually have eyes on the sides of their heads, so
that they can see predators coming from any direction.

Contents
of pellets The Burrowing owl can make a
noise like a rattlesnake to scare
predators away from its hole

GOING UNDERGROUND Scleral ring, a bony


BRINGING UP DINNER Most owls are solitary, but burrowing owls ring that protects
Like many other birds, owls live in colonies. They nest in old ground most of the eye
cough up pellets after they squirrel and prairie dog mounds in
have eaten (see pp. 22–23). North America. These tunnels may be
They swallow indigestible as deep as 9 ft (2.7 m) underground.
parts of their quarry, such as Burrowing owls have less of a facial
fur, bones, feathers, and even disk than most owls because they are
small shells. Their stomach mainly diurnal (active in the day) and
makes these parts into a have less need for extra-fine hearing
bundle and coughs it up and sight than nocturnal owl’s.
before the bird feeds again. Burrowing owls often stand
on the top of their mounds to
keep a lookout for danger

Owl can fit into


burrows only
4 in (10 cm) wide

The burrowing owl’s


legs are probably
longer for its body size
than any other owls

50
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Owls’ senses
Owls are famous for their ability to see in the dark. They
cannot see in total darkness but need only the tiniest bit Starting face
of light. Their hearing is even better: In tests, barn owls backward, an
have caught mice in total darkness by hearing alone. owl can turn its
Most birds have small ear openings; owls have long head over 360°
vertical slits that can be almost as long as the head If they start face
(p. 15). In some owls, one of the ears is much higher forward, owls can
on the bird’s head than the other. This makes it easier turn their heads
for the owl to work out where a sound is coming 270° each way
from, and so to hunt down the animal that made it.
Another way Ear tufts have nothing to do with ears; they
to look at life are probably used to signal moods, such
as anger, excitement, and fear
Owls, such as this juvenile
barn owl, can turn their Facial disk channels
heads in every direction light and sound
into eyes and ears
WHAT A DISH
One of the things that helps owls,
such as this Bengal eagle owl, to
see and hear so well is the shape of
their faces. They have a facial disk
or dish, which funnels all available
light and sound into their eyes
and ears – somewhat like
a satellite dish. This Tawny owl with
facial disk is usually head turned
marked by a
ring of small
bristle-type
feathers.

Mouth is much
larger than
size of beak
would suggest

(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Birds of prey in history
Birds of prey have always seemed magical and
fascinating to human beings. They are important
symbols in ancient cultures all over the world and in
many religions. The eagle, always seen as the king of
the birds, represents authority, strength, victory, and
INDIAN FALCONER
pride, and it is linked with the sun, royalty, and gods,
This 17th-century Indian especially sky gods. The owl may symbolize wisdom,
falconer was part of a very
ancient tradition. Falconry or, because it is a bird of the night, it may be linked
has long been practiced in with death and ill fortune, its cry an evil omen. More
the Indian subcontinent. The
earliest surviving reference is practically, people have hunted with raptors since
from the 2nd century ad, but ancient times. As far as is known, falconry was first
it may have been practiced
much earlier. In China, practiced in Central Asia about 4,000 years ago. It has
falcons were being
used for hunting by
been popular for many centuries in China, India, the
the 7th century bc. Middle East, and Europe.

Coffin for falcon


mummy; the designs
are just like those on
human mummy cases

MUMMIFIED FALCON
Many ancient Egyptian gods and
goddesses were linked with animals and
birds, such as the cow, the vulture, and
the falcon. Some were even kept in
temples to represent these deities. There
was a falcon-headed god called Horus,
meaning “the lofty one.” Falcons such
as the one above were mummified
and buried in tombs with kings.

Falconers’ gloves are


traditionally made of strong
leather to keep talons from
puncturing the hand beneath Eagle
feathers

William brought several species


of raptor with him that had not
Training horses to been seen in England before
stand having raptors
this close is not easy
EARLY BIRDS
This picture comes
from the Bayeux
Tapestry, woven to
celebrate William the
Conqueror’s conquest
of England in 1066.
The first English
falconer was probably
an 8th-century Saxon
king of Kent, Ethelbert II.
The most famous early European
falconer was the German emperor
Frederick II, who once lost an important
battle so that he could go hawking.

52
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Painted plaster mask The Cooper’s hawk
for a falcon mummy is almost vertical as
it comes in to land

This was worn on a


lip plug, which was
inserted through a hole
made in the bottom lip

FACIAL CHARM
Because raptors have always
been seen as special and precious,
jewelry and statues have often
been made in their image. Eagle
heads like this one were made as
lip ornaments by the Mixtecs of
Mexico, who made most of the
gold work for the famous Aztec
empire. Birds of prey have also
often been featured in objects
made for ritual religious use.

The actual
falcon mummy

Hunting straps, a
modern invention

HAWK MAGIC
To have a wild bird
such as this Cooper’s
hawk choose to fly
toward you and land
on your fist is a magical
experience. There is a bond
between falconer and bird that
has given falconry an appeal to
people in many different cultures,
throughout history. Today, although The Cooper’s hawk throws
falconry is no longer needed to provide its legs up high to cushion
food, its appeal is as strong as ever. the impact of landing

EAGLES AND THE SPIRIT


The bald eagle and golden eagle
have long been objects of worship
to North American Indians.
Eagles are still important in the
ceremonies of many Native
American peoples. Their
feathers have often been
collected and used in many
decorative ways, most
famously on headdresses.
This eagle feather wand
(left) was waved to the
music of drums and
rattles in the eagle dance
of the Cherokee tribe.

DESERT SPORT
Falconry has been
popular in the Arab
world for centuries.
Originally, as elsewhere,
it was a means of
catching food, such as
bustards and desert hares. Now it is a
sport. The falcons are often transported
to the hunting grounds in airplanes, and
the chase is more likely to be followed
in Land-Rovers than on camels.

53
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Training a bird of prey
Once, birds were trained to catch
prey for humans to eat, but today
falconry is a popular sport. It is
practised in many parts of the world,
including the United States, Europe,
16th-century English the Arab world, and Central Asia.
falconer putting a Receiver and aerial
hood on a falcon Birds that are flown range from great used by falconer
eagles to tiny sparrowhawks. The RADIO CONTROL?
Even birds of prey get lost sometimes, so
first step in training a bird is to let it know that the falconers tie bells to their birds to help locate
them. Nowadays, they can use radio tracking
trainer is not an enemy, but a friendly source of Transmitter equipment, called telemetry. A very small
food. Next, the bird is asked to jump or hop onto and bells transmitter (left) is attached to the bird before it
are clipped starts flying. This transmitter sends out a “bleep”
the trainer’s gloved fist for food. The distance is to bird that can be heard by a special receiver (above) up
then increased until the bird is flying 330 ft (100 m) to a distance of 15 miles (25 km) in perfect
weather conditions, most often about 4 miles
or so to the trainer’s fist. Throughout these (6 km). The signal can sometimes be blocked by
exercises, the bird is attached to the falconer by a hills or woods.

long, fine string. When the bird responds well to


Smaller part of jesses
the falconer’s calls, it can be flown free, and the attached to bird’s legs
Larger part
falconer and bird can begin to hunt together. of jesses
removable
for safe
The hood “hoodwinks,“ or flying
fools, the bird into thinking
that it is night, and so time
to be calm and still

WEIGHT WATCHERS
Peregrine Probably the most important Anglo-Indian hood
falcon piece of falconry equipment
is the scales. Falconers know Hawk master Old brass
the best “flying weight” of swivel swivel
each bird and weigh their
birds each day before flying
them. If the bird is too heavy,
it may not be hungry enough Hawk and Sparrowhawk
to want to hunt, or it may fly falcon swivel swivel
off into a tree to rest rather
than come back. If it is too
light, it will feel weak and Dutch hood FURNITURE FOR BIRDS
sick. So it must be at the The trained bird has to wear
right weight for the falconer various pieces of equipment,
to be sure it will come back. known as “furniture,” so that its
handler can control it. It wears
leather straps, called jesses, on
its legs so that the falconer can
Weights must hang on to it – a little like the
be accurate collar on a dog. The falconer
holds long straps attached to
the jesses. The straps are
Blocked hood threaded through a metal
swivel so that they don’t
become tangled if the bird
twists around. If the bird is
on an outside perch, it is
tethered by a leash threaded
through the ring on the swivel.

The falconer’s knot has


to be tied one-handed,
as the other hand is
carrying the bird
Arab-style hood

54
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Plume on hood acts
as handle when
putting hood on
or taking it off

Dummy rabbit for


Falconer’s bag, hawks or buzzards
with pockets to chase
for meat and
equipment

Rabbit lure

Spare pair Falconer’s


of jesses glove
kept on bag

Leash should be
wrapped neatly,
otherwise it might
tangle the bird
if it jumps or
twists around

Old pair of wings with


meat attached, used
in training falcons

PORTRAIT OF A FALCONER Belt keeps falconry


It takes a long time to learn how to be a falconer. bag in place
A mistake can cause the loss or even the death
of a bird. The bird needs to be flown every day
while it is being trained except when it is having
a rest to molt. An experienced falconer can have
a falcon or buzzard flying free in two or three
weeks and an eagle in six weeks, although
the bird will still have much more to learn.

Right-handers hold
birds on left hand,
left-handers the
other way round
Rabbit
Creanse (training line) leg
Larger bits of
meat are used
to get the birds’
attention, smaller
bits are given
as rewards

Clippers
Lure
Knife Bits of beef

Items falconers carry in their bags

55
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Around the world
Many of the raptors which breed in the northern hemisphere
fly south for the winter (migrate). In 28 species, all the birds migrate
The Philippine
eagle is one of the each year. In another 42 species, the northernmost birds go south
world’s largest for winter. By flying south in autumn, they avoid cold weather,
eagles, with a
particularly short days, and less food. By going north in the spring, they can
massive beak take advantage of longer days in which to hunt, and the abundant
food supplies of the northern summer. Migrating can be dangerous:
birds have to deal with bad weather and, much worse, people who
shoot them. Hundreds of thousands of birds of prey are killed each
EAGLE IN DANGER year along migration routes; not for food, just for fun. Hunting,
The Philippine eagle is the rarest
eagle in the world. The forests that
however, is not the worst of all the problems that raptors face. The
it lives in are disappearing fast. greatest threats are habitat destruction and pollution. As the forests
A captive breeding programme is
trying to restore its numbers, but it of the world are cut down, many raptors lose their homes, and die.
is a very large eagle and needs large
areas of undisturbed forest in which Arrows show direction of major
to hunt. Unless the forest is saved, autumn migrations; some raptors Migration happens over broad fronts,
this eagle will die out in the wild. migrate much shorter distances not narrow channels, except at
concentration points the arrows can
Migrating birds cross only indicate the general direction of
mountain ranges by the the most popular migration routes
lowest passes; they are
easy to shoot as they fly Map showing the major
low over them raptor migration routes:
Falsterbo named places are major
concentration points at One unusual migrant, the eastern
which very many red-footed, or Amur, falcon begins
raptors may be seen its migration this region, and
ends it in East Africa, having
flown across the Indian Ocean

Istanbul
MIGRATION PATTERNS
Tarifa Most raptors avoid flying
Malta
over large areas of water,
if possible, because it is too
Eilat tiring for them. The rising air
Every year five currents on which they rely to
million birds are shot save energy when travelling do
on Malta including not usually form over water (p. 18).
over 100,000 raptors Most migrating raptors fly around
Bab al Mandab seas, rather than over them, and hop
The second greatest raptor from island to island if they have to
concentration point in the cross the sea. Falcons and harriers
world; over a million raptors rely less on soaring and can sustain
pass through each year flapping flight more easily, so they
can fly long distances over water.

Raptors take the routes that


involve the shortest sea
crossings, gathering at
places such as Tarifa, Malta, Some birds move
Istanbul, and Bab al Mandab through the islands
of southeast Asia to
The steppe eagle travels winter in Australia
all the way from the
Russian steppes to
South Africa to avoid the
winter and eat termites

SENSELESS SHOOTING
Raptors have been shot ever since people invented
guns. The worst slaughter occurs at concentration
points on migration routes. These occur where a route is Two dead eagles
channelled into a narrow stream by water or mountain
barriers, or along coastlines and ridges, which birds
follow because they give a steady supply of updrafts.

56
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Goshawks which live in the far
north move south in harsh winters In flight, air pressure bends
when prey becomes scarce primary feathers upwards

SHOULD I STAY OR SHOULD I GO?


In some species, the birds will only
move south in especially cold
winters, or only move within
The steppe eagle their breeding range and not to
migrates 13,000 km an entirely different area, or only
MARATHON MIGRANTS (8,000 miles) some of the birds in a region move.
Steppe eagles travel from each autumn This is called “partial migration”.
central Russia to South Africa A number of species, such as
each autumn. Another long­ goshawks (above), sparrowhawks,
distance migrant is the eastern and buzzards, are partial migrants.
red-footed, or Amur, falcon. It Often, adult birds can stay farther
travels from northern China to north than juveniles, because they
East Africa. Unusually, it are better at finding food.
flies over, not around,
the Indian Ocean.

American migrations tend


FROM SLAUGHTER TO SANCTUARY
‘to follow the lines of coasts Cape May
Hawk Mountain in Pennsylvania, in the United States, is
and ridges, both of which
The best place in the on the Kittatinny ridge, along which many raptors migrate.
provide plentiful up drafts
world to see raptors; Once, many birds were shot as they flew over Hawk
to save raptors’ energy
over 2.5 million may Mountain, but in 1934 it was bought by conservationists,
pass through in one who made it the world’s first bird of prey sanctuary. They
migration season organized the world’s first annual hawk count – since
copied around the world – and led research into raptors.

Panama
Canal
The place and date of the
ringing are written on
the ring, so that the next
scientists to trap the bird The birds using this route
can trace its movements tend to follow the warmer
coastline, rather than the
colder mountains

A RING TO TRACK A RAPTOR WITH RAPTOR HOMES DEMOLISHED


It is hard to know when and where birds travel, and The world’s rain forests are being chopped down at a fast
how far. One method scientists use to find out this rate, destroying the homes and habitats of many raptors,
information is to put little metal rings on birds’ legs. and of many other living creatures, all irreplaceable.
Birds can be ringed in the nest when young, or Habitat loss is the worst of all the problems affecting
trapped when older, ringed, and released. If they Only a few raptors, and a number of species, such as the Madagascar
are trapped again elsewhere, or found dead, the raptors migrate fish eagle, are close to extinction. Pollution is the second
information is sent to central collecting points. Some this far south greatest problem, especially in countries where DDT and
birds now wear transmitters tracked by satellites. other long-lasting lethal pesticides are still in use.

57
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Raptor records
LOFTIEST OF THEM ALL

The fastest bird in the world, the bird with Most birds do not fly high.
They stay low, near their prey.
the greatest wing area, the bird that catches Some, however, do go very
high when migrating. The broad-winged
the largest quarry – all these are birds of prey. hawk goes up to 16,500–20,000 ft
(5,000–6,400 m). One Rüppell’s griffon
Fossil remains tell us of other remarkable (above) hit a plane at 37,000 ft (10,000 m)
raptors. The plains of Argentina hold the bones above West Africa, but why this bird
was flying so high is a mystery, as
of a prehistoric condor-like bird that had a 25-ft Rüppell’s griffons do not migrate.
SPEED KING
The gyrfalcon is the
(8-m) wingspan. In the recent past there was
fastest of all the falcons a species of eagle in New Zealand, Haast’s Falcons fold their wings
further in than this when
in level flight. It may be
the fastest in a stoop as eagle, that was one-third bigger than any stooping really fast
well, because it is the living raptor. It became extinct only within WINGED LIGHTNING
largest and heaviest
falcon. The high-speed the last thousand years. Many of today’s When falcons stoop
(dive) down on their
tests done so far, most magnificent raptors may join it soon, prey, they travel faster
however, have been
on peregrines, so the thanks to human beings. They are in danger than any other birds on
earth. The peregrine
highest recorded speeds
are of peregrines.
because of the damage we cause to the falcon (left) is usually
environment, damage which is increasingly quoted as the fastest, but
the other large falcons
rebounding on us. As one scientist said, can probably stoop as
fast. The maximum speed
“An environment unfit for raptors is an of a stoop is disputed.
environment unfit for humanity.” It is probably about
140 mph (225 km/h),
although some estimates
LIVES ANYWHERE, EATS ANYTHING are higher.
The black kite is possibly the most common
bird of prey in the world. A very adaptable
Old World kite, it owes its success to its
willingness to eat almost anything, from
fish to the leftovers it finds in trash cans. In
addition, it lives happily alongside humans.
So do American and European kestrels,
black vultures, and turkey vultures,
also among the most populous
raptors in the world.

A small but
genuine raptor

PYGMY RAPTOR
Black kites have The smallest birds of prey are the
the forked tails seven species of falconet, or pygmy
typical of kites falcon. Despite their size, they look just
GIANT OF THE SKIES like the other birds of prey, on a smaller
The 10-ft (3-m) wingspan of the Andean condor scale. They catch insects, lizards, and
is second in size only to that of the albatross. even birds nearly as big as themselves.
The condor’s very broad wings give it the The African pygmy falcon (above) is
greatest wing area of any bird. It needs the one of the smallest. The very smallest
wing area to lift it when it flies, because it can is the black-thighed falconet,
weigh up to 30 lb (13.5 kg). The condor is also which weighs 1–2 oz (28–56 g), and
probably the longest-lived of all the raptors: is 5.5–7 in (14–17 cm) high.
One condor was brought to the Moscow zoo
as an adult (at least five years old) in 1892 and
died there in 1964, when it must have been at
least 77 years old. No bird in the wild would
live anywhere near that long. Life expectancy
Labrador is included to show generally increases with size among raptors,
how big the condor’s wings are so condors probably do live the longest.

58
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Imperial eagles have
special protection, but
they still may not
BACK FROM THE BRINK survive
At this moment in time,
the California condor is
probably the rarest bird
of prey in the world. The white feathers on
In the 1980s, shooting, the back distinguish
habitat destruction, lead the imperial eagle
poisoning, and other from the much more
causes brought the species to a common golden eagle
point where there were only 27
birds left, and finally the last
wild condors were brought into
captivity for their own protection.
Fortunately, they breed well in
captivity, and the young are now
being released into the wild.

California condors
are famously ugly

A forest eagle, the


harpy has relatively
short, broad wings
and a long tail

FATAL FEET
Harpy eagles are
probably the most
powerful of all raptors.
They live in the rainforests
of South America and hunt
quarry as large as sloths and big
monkeys. Female harpy eagles have RAPTORS UNDER PRESSURE
talon-spans (from front to hind talon) of 8–9 in A number of raptor species are
(20–23 cm). Their hind talons are up to 3.5 in (9 cm) endangered. One is the Spanish,
long, bigger than the claws of a grizzly bear. or western, species of imperial
eagle (above). The total population is probably down to
150 pairs. The causes of its decline include poisoning, a
fall in the number of rabbits, and electrocution on power
lines. A captive breeding program has been set up, but
it has a long way to go. Around the world, habitat
destruction is the greatest single problem facing
birds of prey, especially for raptors on
islands, where the original population
is often very small and the birds
have nowhere else to go.

The largest
primary flight
feathers in the world

Bird can withdraw


its neck into ruff
to keep warm

Andean condors have to


run to get airborne on flat
land; they prefer to jump
off a cliff or run downhill

59
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Acknowledgments
Dorling Kindersley would like to Picture credits Frank Lane Picture Agency:
thank: The publisher would like John Hawkins 39bc; E & D
Everyone at the National Birds to thank the following for their Hosking 56 bc; Alan Parker
of Prey Centre, near Newent, kind permission to reproduce the 47tr.
Gloucestershire, England (Craig images: Giraudon, Paris: 27cb; Avec
Astbury, John Crooks, Monica Authorisation speciale de la
Garner, Ian Gibbons, Debbie t = top, b = bottom, c = center, Ville De Bayeux 52bl, 52tl.
Grant, Breeze Hale, Angie Hill, l = left, r = right Robert Harding Picture Library:
Philip Jones, Kirsty Large, Mark Photri inc. 36cr.
Parker, Mark Rich, Jan Stringer). Ardea, London: Eric Dragesco Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
The Booth Natural History 24tr. Association, PA: Wendy Scott
Museum, Brighton (Jeremy British Museum: Front cover tl, 57cr.
Adams); Dr. Steve Parry. Back cover tl, 50tr, 52tr/53tl. Peter Newark’s Pictures: 42clb.
Bruce Coleman Collection: Jane NHPA: Martin Wendler 57br;
Research and editorial Burton 49bl; Raimund Cramm Alan Williams 58cr.
assistance: 38bl; Peter Davey 58tr; Jemima Parry-Jones: 11tl, 38bc,
Sean Stancioff Francisco J. Erize 12bc; Pekka 40tl, 45crb, 58br; Miguel Lopez
Helo 43tr; Gordon Langsbury 41tl.
Design assistance: 36tl; Mary Plage 27tl; Marie Planet Earth: D. Robert Franz
Julie Ferris, Iain Morris Read 44crb; N. Schwiatz 34cl; 37tl; Nick Garbutt 47cla;
Uwe Walz 42br; Joseph Van William S. Paton 47tl; David A.
Artwork: Bill Le Fever, Gilly Warmer 59tl; Staffan Widstrand Ponton 10cl; Mike Read 49tr;
Newman, John Woodcock 16br; Rod Williams 13tl. Ronald S. Rogoff 43tc;
Cornell Laboratory of Johnathan Scott 44tc, 44clb;
Endpapers: Iain Morris Ornithology: L. Page Brown Anup Shah 58cl.
38tl. Kati Poynor: 35tl.
Index: Marion Dent Dover Publications: 10cra, 13cla, RSPB: M. W. Richards 36bl.
32tl, 34c, 58tl. Frank Spooner Pictures:
Additional photography: Mary Evans Picture Library: Gamma/F. Soir 57bl.
Steve Gorton, Alex Wilson, 40cl, 42tl, 43cl, 45tr, 46tr, 53br, Michael Zabé: 53tc.
C Laubscher 54tl.

61
(c) 2011 Dorling Kindersley, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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