Interview with Mike Bradbury answering frequently asked questions (FAQ) about Central Valley Swainson's Hawk.
Send your Qs to contact@swainsonshawk.org
Mike Bradbury is a wildlife biologist
and member of the Swainson's Hawk Technical Advisory Committee. He has been
doing research on Swainson's Hawk since 1992. In 2008, he installed a web cam
at an office building in Natomas to monitor nesting Swainson's Hawks.
The web cam is part of the Swainsons
Hawk Technical Advisory Committees research on reproductive development.
The project was funded with DWR mitigation money from the Temporary Barriers
Project, and approved by the Department of Fish and Game. The
video stream was made possible by the Department of Consumer Affairs, and employees
there generated a number of questions to Mike. These are printed below with
Mike's answers.
1) What is the current population? Where is most of the population located?
The world-wide nesting population occurs from southern
Canada to northern Mexico, from the Mississippi River to Californias Central
Valley. The population has been estimated via migration counts in Panama and
Vera Cruz, and is about 500,000 (average per year). The California population
was determined through a State-wide nest survey to be 1800 to 2000 nesting pairs,
down from the estimated pre-Europeans size of 20,000 nesting pairs.
2) When do they start to migrate?
As per the Central Valley birds, they move throughout
the Central Valley in August and September taking advantage of all the agricultural
harvesting, which provides a lot of opportunities for finding and capturing
prey. The species is highly adapted to agricultural practices and has abandoned
most of its historic grassland habitat. In the beginning of October they begin
to mass in large groves of eucalyptus trees in the south Valley, and from there
move to their wintering grounds. The Central Valley birds primarily winter in
western Mexico and Central America, although some go as far as Columbia and
northern Argentina. By contrast, every Swainsons hawk that nests outside
the Valley (that has been tracked) migrated to Argentina. Because of the differences
in wintering grounds, we implemented a genetics study to determine if our birds
are an isolated population of Swainsons hawk.
3) The 'book' said they will migrate to South America. Can you track their migration?
As above, yes we can and have tracked our birds, and Swainsons
hawks outside the Valley have been tracked by other researchers. We use satellite
tracked transmitters that fit on the bird like a backpack.
4) When they come back do they come back to the same area to start their own
family? Or is Bakersfield close enough?
Statistically speaking, adults that have nested already
will return to a location as close to their previous nest as possible. Sometimes
competitors get there first, and sometimes their nest site becomes a shopping
center parking lot (for instance), so they have to use an alternative nest site
if they can find one. Great-horned owls and red-tailed hawks usually only force
the Swainsons hawks to move a short distance, a few hundred yards, to
another available tree, but urban development usually results in the loss of
the nest site. Your birds are a rare exception to that rule, but over time,
statistically speaking, that nest site next to your office building will be
abandoned as well.
The genetics study confirmed that most birds hatched in one area will return
to that same area to nest. Most wildlife has that instinct. But in all populations,
a small fraction has the instinct to move somewhere else, sometimes referred
to as exploratory dispersal. Thats how species expand and find new habitat
to occupy. But it is very dangerous to leave an area where you know where to
find food and understand your competitors and predators. The vast, vast majority
of exploratory dispersal leads to death and no new occupied range.
5) What is a typical number of eggs laid?
At least 1 and up to 4. It varies from individual to individual,
and from year to year, depending on the availability of food (prey). The same
goes for the number of chicks that hatch and fledge (fly for the first time).
In bad nesting years, 50% or more of nests might fail, and the average number
of chicks per successful nest might be 1. In great nesting years, nest success
might climb to 90% and almost every nest seemingly has 3 chicks; in those years
we have found rare nests of 4 young. In an average year, most nests have 2 chicks,
fewer have 1 or 3, and some nests fail.
6) Do both male and female take care of the babies? At what point do the parents
leave them? Or do they ever fully leave them?
Both parents incubate the eggs, although the female does
the vast majority of that work. The male does the vast majority of hunting to
feed the chicks and the female. The female takes the prey from the male and
feeds the chicks (and herself). Both defend the territory, the nest, and the
young equally (on average). The female also has the important role of shading
the chicks. Even when the chicks are quite old and almost ready to fly, the
female on hot days may still stand over them, wings spread somewhat, protecting
them from the heat of the sun, especially if the nest is exposed to direct sunlight.
Between 2 and 4 weeks after the chicks fledge, the adults and chicks go their
separate ways. The chicks will find other first year Swainsons hawks to
congregate with, and as a group they will roost and forage together.
7) How long do the siblings stay together?
That isnt known, or at least I have never heard
or seen that in a study. There is some speculation that adult males and females,
as well as first and second year birds, may winter in slightly separate areas,
but if they do, there is obvious overlap between the three groups.
8) How can you tell male from female?
The females are almost always larger than the males within
a given population. Individuals of both sexes in the north (or colder climates)
are bigger on average than those in the south (or hot climates). Weighing them
is the easiest method if you know the average weights for the area. If you see
them side-by-side, youll usually notice the larger size of the female.
In the Central Valley, the darker of the pair is usually the female (looking
at the belly, chin and wing lining in combination). That rule breaks down, though,
when both are very light or very dark. You can also use the cues for duties
listed above to determine their sex, and of course, when they copulate, the
male is above.
9) How does their prey die? Is it the impact of the talons? Or a killing bite
like a cat? It just seems that they don't have enough mass or strength to make
a very clean kill.
If youve had a Swainsons hawk grab your arm
or leg with their talons as Ive had, youd be quite impressed with
their strength. The kill is primarily from puncture during the grab, followed
by biting/tearing vital organs and blood vessels. Mice are fairly fragile animals
in contrast to larger mammals. If it is any consolation, mice, voles and gophers
often get a bite in before they are dispatched, which is a good reason to do
it quickly.
10) Do they eat any vegetation? Or are they strictly carnivores?
Although Swainsons hawk pellets (regurgitated indigestible
matter compressed into a pellet) have been found with grass in them, I have
never seen a study that indicated they purposely eat vegetation that wasnt
inside or stuck to a prey item, or picked up incidentally while eating their
prey. Although they primarily eat small mammals, they also eat snakes, lizards,
and small birds during the nesting season, and on their wintering grounds they
eat just about anything they can find and kill, including lots and lots of insects.
In Argentina they are known as the grasshopper eagle.