Gray-headed kite

Leptodon cayanensis

The gray-headed kite is a raptor found in open woodland and swamp forests. It shares the genus ''Leptodon'' with the extremely rare white-collared kite. It breeds from eastern Mexico and Trinidad south to Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and northern Argentina.
Gray-headed Kite  Geotagged,Gray-headed Kite,Leptodon cayanensis,Spring,Trinidad and Tobago,black,feeding,gray,prey,raptor,white

Appearance

The gray-headed kite is 46–53 cm in length and weighs 410-605 g. The adult has a grey head, black upperparts, white underparts, and a black tail with two or three white bars. The bill is blue and the legs grey. The flight is a deliberate ''flap-flap-glide''.

Immature birds have two colour morphs; the light phase is similar to the adult, but has a white head and neck, with a black crown and eyestripe, black bill and yellow legs. The dark phase has a blackish head, neck and upperparts, and dark-streaked buff underparts.
Grey-headed Kite flying off seen in the savannah near Puerto Boyacá Colombia,Geotagged,Gray-headed kite,Leptodon cayanensis,Puerto Boyacá,Winter

Habitat

The gray-headed kite feeds mainly on reptiles, but also takes frogs and large insects. It usually sits on an open high perch from which it swoops on its prey. The call is a mewling ''keow''. The nest is made of sticks lined with grass and is built high in a tree. The clutch is one or two white eggs, purplish at one end and spotted brown.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderAccipitriformes
FamilyAccipitridae
GenusLeptodon
SpeciesL. cayanensis