Broad-winged hawk

Buteo platypterus

The broad-winged hawk is a small hawk of the genus "Buteo". During the summer, some subspecies are distributed over eastern North America, as far west as British Columbia and Texas; they then migrate south to winter in the Neotropics from Mexico south to southern Brazil.
Broad-winged Hawk (Buteo platypterus) being harassed by a kingbird RN El Vinculo, VAC, Colombia. Mar 17th, 2018 Broad-winged Hawk,Buteo platypterus,Colombia,Geotagged,Winter

Appearance

The broad-winged hawk is a relatively small "Buteo", with a body size from 32 to 44 cm in length and weighing 265 to 560 g. The tail is relatively short, measuring 14.5–19.0 cm in length. The tarsus measures from 5.6 to 6.6 cm. As in most raptors, females are slightly larger than males.

Broad-winged hawks have relatively short and broad wings, pointed at the end, which have a tapered appearance unique to the species. The wingspan can range from 74 to 100 cm, with the extended wing bone measuring 22.7–30 cm.

An adult's body is a dark brown with a white belly and chest containing horizontal barring. Its tail can be a dark grey-black with white lines along the middle, base, and tip. The young hawks have a slightly different colouring with more white and longitudinal barring instead of horizontal barring. The two types of colouration are a dark morph with fewer white areas and a light morph that is more pale overall. The light morph of this bird is most likely to be confused with the red-shouldered hawk, but it has a longer, more heavily barred tail and wings with a solid rufous colour in the adult, which are usually distinctive. Rare dark morphs are a darker brown on both upperparts and underparts. Dark-morph short-tailed hawks are similar, but are whitish under the tail with a single subterminal band.
The Logic of the Sky | Buteo platypterus A one-eyed Broad-Winged Hawk listens
 to the wind, divining the logic of the sky.

Wild Light Post: http://www.bugdreams.com/archives/logic-of-the-sky/ Broad-Winged Hawk,Broad-winged Hawk,Buteo platypterus,bird,blind,flight,hawk,male,predator,raptor,sight,vision,wild,wildlife,wings

Distribution

Broad-winged hawks have a wide range in North America and South America, from southern Canada to southern Brazil. Their breeding range is in the northern and eastern parts of North America, and some migrate in the winter to Florida, southern Mexico, and northern South America. Five subspecies are endemic to the Caribbean and do not migrate.
Broad-winged hawk (Buteo platypterus) Route de Kaw, French Guiana. Dec 1, 2023 Broad-winged hawk,Buteo platypterus,Fall,French Guiana,Geotagged

Reproduction

These birds have only one mate during the breeding season, possibly because the male also helps a small amount with the rearing of the chicks. They breed between April and August, starting when they reach sexual maturity at about two years old.

To attract and court females, the males perform a courtship display flight including cartwheels, dives, and other aerial acrobatics. Birds meet in the air, hook their feet together and spiral down together. They also compete and fight with other males for the chance to mate with a female. If one of the males is successful, the mating pair has only one brood that season, consisting of one to four eggs.

Both the male and female build the nest out of sticks and twigs in a deciduous tree. Once laid, the brown-spotted eggs are typically 49 mm × 39 mm and weigh about 42 g. The female then develops a brood patch and incubates the eggs for 28 days or longer before they hatch.

The hatchlings will appear semialtricial, incapable of any complex coordination, but have open eyes and are covered in down feathers. Chicks have rapid body growth until they are almost at adult body size, when they are capable of walking, flying, and eating without parental help. While in the nest, the female gives most of the parental care, protecting and providing food for the chicks. The male may provide some food for the female and offspring, but his visits are short lived.

Once a prey item is obtained for the nest, the female tears off pieces and feeds the chicks until they are able to rip meat off on their own. Often, the chicks fight for possession of the offered morsel, the younger ones usually losing and not getting enough.

Broad-winged hawks protect their nests in a show of aggression towards any suspected threat, but they generally do not make physical contact. Predators of eggs and nestlings include raccoons, crows, porcupines, and American black bears. Adults have been known to fall to red-tailed hawks, great horned owls, bald eagles, and golden eagles. The hatchlings need 5–6 weeks before they are able to leave the nest. Some young, even after that time, remain in the area of the nest for several weeks more.
Broad-winged Hawk An ambush predator, here on tree stump overlooking areas of open montane forest at approximately 2,200 metres Broad-winged hawk,Buteo platypterus,Estancia La Bravera,Venezuela

Food

Broad-winged hawks are carnivores. The types of food they eat depends on the time of year. During the summer or nesting season, the parents and ultimately their chicks eat small mammals, such as chipmunks, shrews, and voles, frogs, lizards, and sometimes even other nesting birds like Cardinals.

In the winter, they have been observed feeding on insects, frogs, snakes, crabs, and some small mammals. To catch their prey, broad-winged hawks watch from low branches, hiding in the foliage, until a target is spotted. From their roost, they do a short, fast glide to capture the prey.

They give special attention to preparing their food for consumption, skinning frogs and snakes and plucking prey birds' feathers. Most small mammals, though, are eaten whole. They rarely drink water and are able to survive solely with the water present in their prey.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderAccipitriformes
FamilyAccipitridae
GenusButeo
SpeciesB. platypterus