Raptors of Shoshone Tecopa and the Amargosa River
Just about every type of Vulture,Hawk, Eagle, and Falcon appear in our area at some time .
Here are a few of my favorites.
Northern Harrier (juvenile plumage)
Northern
Harriers breed regularly in Shoshone, and Tecopa Marsh. On the first night that
I arrived here from Maine in 2009, I
witnessed the “mid-air food toss” at sunset of the male Northern Harrier
dropping a fresh prey item in flight to the female who swooped up, grabbed it
easily and disappeared back down into the nest area. I have been hooked on
Harries ever since. They are present year round in Tecopa Marsh but the birds
are not necessarily the same individuals year round. On Tecopa Marsh, Harriers often easily move
Coyotes away from the nest area by landing near the Coyote, allowing it to
approach, then moving to an enticing nearby spot, and repeating the process
until the Coyote is out of the Harrier territory. Northern Harrier is a “California Species of
Special Concern” due to marsh-like habitat destruction throughout California.
Their plumages are completely different. Northern Harriers
are easy to identify with a little practice, and can be found in marshes from
Alaska to Central America.
There are 13 Species of Harriers in the world. Our Northern Harrier is extremely closely
related to the Hen Harrier which occupies similar habitat types throughout the Northeastern
Hemisphere, from Portugal to Japan.
American Kestrel
At 7.5”-8” this is the 2nd smallest of all the worlds’ 39
Falcon species, all in the genus Falco. Only the Seychelles Kestrel is smaller.American
Kestrel has a huge range. It covers most of the Western Hemisphere from Alaska
to Tierra del Fuego.. They are beautiful, graceful, and take a variety of prey
from grasshoppers, dragonflies, to lizards, and small birds.
Locally, Kestrels are often seen in winter hunting from power poles and wires
around Shoshone, and a pair is often found around Tecopa Marsh, and or the
Amargosa Canyon during breeding. Kestrels will use a nest box of the following dimensions.
Prairie Falcon
Prairie
Falcons are our year round resident falcon. They do breed in this area, I have
found their nests more than once. They breed up on high cliffs. Prairie Falcons
average only slightly smaller than Peregrine Falcons. Reverse sexual dimorphism
is apparent in the size differences between males and females. According to “Falcons
of the World” by Tom J. Cade, males weigh as low as 17.5 ounces and at the most
22.5 ounces, females as much as 34.5 ounces. Imagine a 17.5 ounce male and a 34.5 ounce
female! When seen as a pair they seem almost a different species. Prairie
Falcons can take a great variety of prey items from large insects and small
birds to Chuckwallas Desert Iguanas, Desert Cottontails, Black-tailed
Jackrabbits, and any type of rodents.
See the powerful legs of Prairie Falcon |