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[3] [4] [9] Harlan's hawk is markedly different from all other red tails and can be identified nearly 100% of the time by an experienced hawk watcher. [4] [9] Throughout the morphs of this subspecies, the plumage is predominantly blackish, lacking any warmer or brownish tones (save the tail). Harlan's hawks usually have faint streaks on the ...
Adults may show nearly endless variation in coloring and many may combine several characteristics of the three main morphs. Dark morph juveniles are usually mostly dark brown but with extensive pale mottling on the back and occasional tawny-edge feathers on the underside and slightly broader bars on the tail than pale morph B. j. calurus ...
The alaska red-tailed hawk was described by Joseph Grinnell (Glacier Bay, Alaska) in 1909 as "always blackest dorsally, and decidedly smaller" than a "large series" of the western red-tailed hawk (B. j. calurus). [3] B. j. alascensis and B. j. calurus were previously considered to be the same subspecies.
Pale Male (1990 – May 16, 2023), or Palemale, was a red-tailed hawk that resided in and near New York City's Central Park from the 1990s until 2023. Birdwatcher and author Marie Winn gave him his name because of the unusually light coloring of his head.
Pale morph adult ferruginous hawk can show mildly tawny-pink (but never truly rufous) upper tail, and like red-tails tend to have dark markings on underwing-coverts and can have a dark belly band, but compared to red-tailed hawks have a distinctly broader head, their remiges are much whiter looking with very small, dark primary tips, they lack ...
Krider's hawk or Krider's red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis kriderii) [1] is a subspecies or color morph of red-tailed hawk. [2] Authorities vary in their treatment of the taxon . [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It was named after John Krider , the gunsmith from Philadelphia who collected the type specimen, which is preserved in the collection of the ...
Below pale morph adults are all light rufous to tawny buff or brown, sometimes paler below the belly area. In worn individuals the bodily feathers of pale morph tawny eagles can appear almost whitish. [4] Dark morph juvenile tawny eagles are generally light rufous to rufous brown with creamier lower back to upper tail coverts.
The rufous-tailed hawk is a medium-sized hawk with a wing span of 45–60 cm. [1] The overall size range of the hawk is 54–60 cm. [3] There are two different colorations of the rufous-tailed hawk. The more common pale version of the hawk has a blackish brown upper parts, with a darker cap and cinnamon feathers along the side of the head and neck.