COMMON NAME: Northern Goshawk
SCIENTIFIC NAME: Accipiter gentilis
IDENTIFYING CHARACTERISTICS:
The largest of the accipiters, females can weigh up to 1000 grams. Adult
goshawks are told by their slate gray/blue back, dark cap, and white eye
line. The underside
is white streaked with black and gray. The red eye color in adults is one
of their most striking characteristics. Immatures are brown on the back
and on
the top of the head; the underside is white streaked with brown. They also
have a white eye stripe, although it is not as prominent as in the adults,
and a yellow iris. The full adult plumage is not reached until the third
year, although second year birds will have some adult plumage. As in all
the accipiters,
the female is larger than the male.
RANGE:
Distributed through the northern hemisphere temperate zone from Siberia through
northern Asia and into Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean. In North
America the species breeds from Alaska across Canada and the northern tier
of states including New England, and northern Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota
then south along the western mountain ranges into Mexico. There seems to
be some expansion of their range in the eastern United States, with breeding
records
reported as far south as Maryland.
HABITAT:
A bird of dense woodlands. In Minnesota, they are found in the northern part
of the state in the summer, and move south in the winter.
NESTING:
Two to five eggs are laid in a well-built stick nest located high in a hardwood
tree. The nest is often built in the crotch of the tree. Goshawks are known
for their ferocious defense of the nest against humans often attacking people
who approach.
FEEDING HABITS:
Goshawks feed on a wide variety of prey, including rabbits and hares, squirrels,
grouse, pigeons, and small birds and mammals. Prey is obtained by a quick
approach from cover. There have been few reports of goshawks eating carrion.
RAPTOR CENTER
DATA:
Not a common patient, they are very excitable in captivity.
CONSERVATION STATUS:
Once shot on sight for their habit of feeding on domestic fowl, their populations
seem to be stable and their range expanding in the Eastern United States.
Often used in falconry.
Other Web Resources:
Northern Goshawk Range
Minnesota Ornithologists' Union bird range map
Additional Information (not specifically about hawks):
Publications