The Birds of North America Online: Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus)
[2024-02-19 10:43:17]
Hawks mainly feed on mammals such as birds, bats, rabbits, rodents, and sometimes mammals such as insects, reptiles and fish. Various bird prey is captured, but other tribes of the scale are usually targeted to specific groups and species, especially pigeons and pigeons. Prey is usually caught in the air, but some may be captured from the ground or underwater. Cruising is fast and agile during flight, usually chasing prey at a very fast rate, or attacking with sudden spectacular diving or "bending too". There is a possibility that the victim of death or injury is overturned, or it is falling to the ground, or the cruise rolls over and comes down from the bottom (2) (3) (5) (6). Breeding is often associated with hunting, but women usually target larger prey (2) (6). Particularly during breeding season, the remaining prey can be cached (stored) (3)
Rafts for recreation are usually found on a single person or in breeding pairs, each pair maintaining a breeding area, usually together throughout the year. Breeding season varies from place to place, depending on weather conditions and availability of bait (2) (6). Courtship includes air display and loud phone (5). The nest is a pair of abandoned nests (2) (3) (6) that can take over cliffs, shelves, buildings, hollow trees, simple scratches sometimes carved into the ground, or other species. Normally, 3 to 4 eggs are placed (clutch size is between 1 and 6), and will hatch after 29 to 33 days. Young swimmers swear in about 35 - 42 days, but rely on adults for several months (2) (6). Hawks breed first for about two years and can survive in the wild for 20 years (2) (3)
Peregrine Falcon has three variants and lives in North America. They are America, Art, and Peale Peregrine Falcons. The Americans (Falco peregrinus anatum) live in southern Alaska, Canada, the USA, and northern Mexico. Arctic falcon (Falco peregrinus tundrius) lives in northern Alaskan slope, northern Canada, all over Greenland and crosses Latin America in winter. Peale's (Falco peregrinus pealei) lives in Aleutian Islands in Washington, British Columbia, northern Alaska throughout the year. Peregrine Falcon has the most natural distribution among every bird in the world. It can be found on all continents except Antarctica. There are other places such as mountains, deserts, jungles, isolated islands in the sea, and others that can not be found. Peregrine Falcon is almost alive because of its unique structure
Falco peregrinus anatum described by Bonaparte in 1838 is known as the American hawk, or "Duck Eagle"; its scientific name is "Ducks Swim". Once it was partly contained in leukemia. It appears mainly in today's Rocky Mountains. It is epidemic throughout Tundra in North America and Northern Mexico, and efforts are currently being reintroduced to try to restore the population. The most mature anatomical structure is the winter within the breeding range, except for those breeding in the north region. Most of the wanderers coming to Western Europe seem to belong to the stronger migratory moss in the north. It has been considered unique since 1968. It is similar to peregrinus, but slightly smaller; adults are a little pale and few have lower patterns, but young are darker and more patterned down. Men weigh between 500 and 700 grams (1.1 to 1.5 pounds) and women weigh between 800 and 1,100 grams (1.8 to 2.4 pounds).
The Falco peregrinus peregrinator described by Sundevall in 1837 is known as Indian Crusade, Black Sahin, Sahin, or Sahin Falcon. It was called Farco Atri Cep or Falco Cheyen. It ranges from Pakistan in southeastern China to India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and South Asia. In India, except for Uttar Pradesh, all states reported Sahin mainly from rocks and hills. According to the report, Sahin also exists in Andaman Islands and Nicobar Islands of Bengal Bay. The clutch size is 3 to 4 eggs, the chick matures for 48 days, and the average nesting success rate per side is 1.32. In India, it is recorded not