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Home > Information about Raptors > Ferruginous Hawk

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Ferruginous Hawk


Ferruginous Hawk

COMMON NAME: Ferruginous Hawk

SCIENTIFIC NAME: Buteo regalis

IDENTIFYING CHARACTERISTICS:
The ferruginous hawk is the largest buteo in North America, with a length of 20 to 25 inches and a wingspan of 53 to 56 inches. They have a short, dark, hooked beak and an extremely long, yellow gape that extends to below the eye. The adult is brown above with rusty streaks and white below. Its legs are feathered to the toes. The sexes are similar.

RANGE:
Mostly western half of North America in the Great Basin and Great Plains. They breed from eastern Washington to southern Alberta and southern Saskatchewan, Canada, south to eastern Oregon, Nevada, northern and southeastern Arizona, northern New Mexico, northwest Texas, western Nebraska, western Kansas, and western Oklahoma. Winters across the southwest to Baja California and central Mexico.

HABITAT:
Open country in semiarid grasslands with scattered trees, rocky mounds, or outcrops and shallow canyons that overlook open valleys. During migration, they may be seen along streams or in agricultural areas.

a young ferruginous hawk
a young ferruginous hawk
NESTING:
Ferruginous hawks may nest in close proximity to each other, less than a half a mile away. They select rocky outcrops, hillsides, rock pinnacles, or trees for nest sites. Nests may be built right on the ground. Nests are built of large twigs or roots, grasses, old bones, or cow or horse dung. Both the male and female participate in nest building, followed by the laying and incubation of three or four eggs that are laid at two-day intervals. The young hatch between February and July after about 28 days of incubation.

They leave the nest 38 to 50 days later. The adults continue to feed the fledged young as well as the nestlings. The young remain with their parents for several weeks after fledging before dispersing on their own.

FEEDING HABITS:
Ferruginous hawks rely primarily on ground squirrels, jackrabbits, pocket gophers, prairie dogs, and kangaroo rats. Other prey includes snakes, lizards, grasshoppers, and crickets. The birds tend to hunt in early morning or late afternoon.

CONSERVATION STATUS:
Populations or ferruginous hawks seem to have declined in most areas of their range -- except in California, where they are thought to have increased in the past decade. In Utah, the ferruginous hawk is listed as a State Threatened Species. It is a federal Species of Concern.

Additional Information (not specifically about hawks):
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