Redirected from Peregrine falcon
Peregrine Falcon | ||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
falco peregrinus |
Adult Peregrine Falcons have slate blue-grey wings and backs barred with black. Their undersides are white with light brown stripes. They have white faces with a black stripe on each cheek, and the head is blue-black. They have large dark eyes. The younger birds are darker below and browner. The females are larger than the males.
In falconry, the hen is known as a falcon and the cock is known as a tercel[?].
Peregrines eat mostly other birds such as shore birds, songbirds, parrots, and ducks. In urban areas they also eat starlings and pigeons. They attack their prey by flying high and diving ("stooping") at the victims.
A peregrine's diving speed is often exagerated, but can exceed 100 miles per hour (160 km/h).
If a Peregrine Falcon lives through its first year, it can live up to 10 years. Most do not survive their first year.
The bird's Latin name, peregrinus, means "foreigner" or "traveler". This is because wintering birds often wander far from their frequently bleak breeding areas.
Peregrine Falcons live mostly along mountain ranges, river valleys, and coastlines. They are widespread in temperate Europe, Asia, North America, and Australia.
In the USA, Peregrine Falcons used to be most commonly found in parts of the Appalachian Mountains and nearby valleys from New England south to Georgia, the upper Mississippi River valley, and the Rocky Mountains. They also lived along the Pacific coast from Mexico north to the Arctic tundra.
The nest is a scrape or depression dug in gravel on a cliff ledge. Sometimes peregrines will nest in a tree cavity or in an old stick nest if no cliff is available. The female usually lays 3 to 5 eggs; the color ranges from reddish white to mottled brown.
The Peregrine Falcon became endangered because of the over-use of pesticides, in particular DDT. Pesticide build-up interfered with reproduction, thinning eggshells and severely restricting the ability of birds to reproduce themselves. In several parts of the world, including eastern North America, the Peregrine Falcon was wiped out by pesticides. In 1970, Peregrine Falcons were put on the US endangered species list.
Wildlife services around the world organized Peregrine Falcon recovery teams to breed peregrines in captivity, among other places, at Cornell University. The birds were fed through a chute so they could not see the human trainers. Then, when they were old enough, the box was opened. This allowed the bird to test its wings. As the bird got stronger the food was reduced because the bird could hunt its own food. This procedure is called hacking. To release a captive-bred falcon, the bird was placed in a special box at the top of a tower or cliff ledge.
Worldwide recovery efforts proved to be remarkably successful. In the United States, the banning of DDT, over time, made it possible for released birds to breed successfully. There are now dozens of breeding pairs of Peregrine Falcons in the northeastern USA. Many have settled in large cities, including New York, where they nest on skyscraper window ledges and the towers of suspension bridges. The story in many other parts of the world has been similar.
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