Ornate Hawk-Eagle

Spizaetus ornatus

The Ornate Hawk-Eagle, "Spizaetus ornatus", is a bird of prey from the tropical Americas. Like all eagles, it is in the family Accipitridae. This species is notable for its vivid colors, which differ markedly between adult and immature birds.
Ornate Hawk-Eagle (Spizaetus ornatus) Lago Sandoval, Madre de Dios, Peru. Aug 31, 2023 Geotagged,Ornate Hawk-Eagle,Peru,Spizaetus ornatus,Winter

Appearance

This is a medium-large raptor, at about 56–68.5 cm in length, 117–142 cm across the wings and weighing about 960-1,650 g. It has a prominent pointed crest, raised when excited, a black bill, broad wings and a long rounded tail.

The typical adult has blackish upperparts and crown, bright chestnut sides to the neck and breast and a black-edged white throat and central breast. The rest of the underparts and feathered legs are white barred with black, and the tail has broad black bars. The underwings are white, with barred flight feathers; due to the heavy pattern birds usually look rather dark in flight.

Sexes are similar, but young birds have a white head and underparts, with a grey crest, brown upperparts, and barring only on the flanks and legs.
Ornate Hawk Eagle Ornate Hawk Eagle Birds,Eagle,Ornate Hawk Eagle

Distribution

This bird is found in humid tropical forests from southern Mexico and the Yucatán Peninsula, to Trinidad and Tobago, south to Peru and Argentina. They are able to tolerate some degree of habitat fragmentation, breeding successfully near cities and in forest fragments as small as 200 hectares. Despite a slender build and a body weight no greater than a large "Buteo" hawk, the Ornate Hawk-Eagle is a notably powerful predator which like other booted eagles can take prey up to 5 times its own weight. Birds are the principal prey and have ranged in size from 180 g to 8 kg when taken. Prey species have included Little Blue Herons, curassows, toucans, wood-quails, pigeons, macaws, parrots, cotingas, chickens and even a Black Vulture. Mammals are also significant prey, with agoutis, squirrels, rats, procyonids and monkeys often taken. Reptiles are also occasionally hunted.

Status

Though locally rare, it is not considered a threatened species by the IUCN due to its wide range.

Behavior

The call is a high-pitched "whee-oo whee-oo".

Reproduction

The male's courtship display is a dive with folded wings, and a climb, sometimes completing a loop. The pair will touch talons in flight as the female rolls on her back. This species builds a large stick nest in a high tree, many meters above ground. The nest is around 1 meter in diameter. Most breeding activity occurs around April/May, differing slightly according to location: in Guatemala breeding activity was observed from March to June, in Costa Rica in April and May, in Panama from November/December to May, and in the lowlands of Ecuador in March and April.

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Status: Least concern
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderAccipitriformes
FamilyAccipitridae
GenusSpizaetus
SpeciesS. ornatus
Photographed in
Peru