Family II. FALCONINAE. FALCONINE BIRDS.
GENUS VIII. NAUCLERUS, Vig. SWALLOW-TAILED HAWK. |
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Family |
THE SWALLOW-TAILED HAWK. [American Swallow-tailed Kite.] |
Genus | NAUCLERUS FURCATUS, Linn. [Elanoides forficatus.] |
The flight of this elegant species of Hawk is singularly beautiful and
protracted. It moves through the air with such ease and grace, that it is
impossible for any individual, who takes the least pleasure in observing the
manners of birds, not to be delighted by the sight of it whilst on wing.
Gliding along in easy flappings, it rises in wide circles to an immense height,
inclining in various ways its deeply forked tail, to assist the direction of its
course, dives with the rapidity of lightning, and, suddenly checking itself,
reascends, soars away, and is soon out of sight. At other times a flock of
these birds, amounting to fifteen or twenty individuals, is seen hovering around
the trees. They dive in rapid succession amongst the branches, glancing along
the trunks, and seizing in their course the insects and small lizards of which
they are in quest. Their motions are astonishingly rapid, and the deep curves
which they describe, their sudden doublings and crossings, and the extreme ease
with which they seem to cleave the air, excite the admiration of him who views
them while thus employed in searching for food.
A solitary individual of this species has once or twice been seen in
Pennsylvania. Farther to the eastward the Swallow-tailed Hawk has never, I
believe, been observed. Travelling southward, along the Atlantic coast we find
it in Virginia, although in very small numbers. Beyond that State it becomes
more abundant. Near the Falls of the Ohio, a pair had a nest and reared four
young, ones, in 1820. In the lower parts of Kentucky it begins to become more
numerous; but in the States farther to the south, and particularly in parts near
the sea, it is abundant. In the large prairies of the Attacapas and Oppellousas
it is extremely common.
In the States of Louisiana and Mississippi, where these birds are abundant,
they arrive in large companies, in the beginning of April, and are heard
uttering a sharp plaintive note. At this period I generally remarked that they
came from the westward, and have counted upwards of a hundred in the space of an
hour, passing over me in a direct easterly course. At that season, and in the
beginning of September, when they all retire from the United States, they are
easily approached when they have alighted, being then apparently fatigued, and
busily engaged in preparing themselves for continuing their journey, by dressing
and oiling their feathers. At all other times, however, it is extremely
difficult to get near them, as they are generally on wing through the day, and
at night rest on the highest pines and cypresses, bordering the river-bluffs,
the lakes or the swamps of that district of country.
They always feed on the wing. In calm and warm weather, they soar to an
immense height, pursuing the large insects called Musquito Hawks, and performing
the most singular evolutions that can be conceived, using their tail with an
elegance of motion peculiar to themselves. Their principal food, however, is
large grasshoppers, grass-caterpillars, small snakes, lizards, and frogs. They
sweep close over the fields, sometimes seeming to alight for a moment to secure
a snake, and holding it fast by the neck, carry it off, and devour it in the
air. When searching for grasshoppers and caterpillars, it is not difficult to
approach them under cover of a fence or tree. When one is then killed and falls
to the ground, the whole flock comes over the dead bird, as if intent upon
carrying it off. An excellent opportunity is thus afforded of shooting as many
as may be wanted, and I have killed several of these Hawks in this manner,
firing as fast as I could load my gun.
The Fork-tailed Hawks are also very fond of frequenting the creeks, which,
in that country, are much encumbered with drifted logs and accumulations of
sand, in order to pick up some of the numerous water-snakes which lie basking in
the sun. At other times, they dash along the trunks of trees, and snap off the
pupae of the locust, or that insect itself. Although when on wing they move
with a grace and ease which it is impossible to describe, yet on the ground they
are scarcely able to walk.
I kept for several days one which had been slightly wounded in the wing.
It refused to eat, kept the feathers of the head and rump constantly erect, and
vomited several times part of the contents of its stomach. It never threw
itself on its back, nor attempted to strike with its talons, unless when taken
up by the tip of the wing. It died from inanition, as it constantly refused the
food placed before it in profusion, and instantly vomited what had been thrust
down its throat.
The Swallow-tailed Hawk pairs immediately after its arrival in the
Southern States, and as its courtships take place on the wing, its motions are
then more beautiful than ever. The nest is usually placed on the top branches
of the tallest oak or pine tree, situated on the margin of a stream or pond. It
resembles that of the Common Crow externally, being formed of dry sticks,
intermixed with Spanish moss, and is lined with coarse grasses and a few
feathers. The eggs are from four to six, of a greenish-white colour, with a few
irregular blotches of dark brown at the larger end. The male and the female sit
alternately, the one feeding the other. The young are at first covered with
buff-coloured down. Their next covering exhibits the pure white and black of
the old birds, but without any of the glossy purplish tints of the latter. The
tail, which at first is but slightly forked, becomes more so in a few weeks, and
at the approach of autumn exhibits little difference from that of the adult
birds. The plumage is completed the first spring. Only one brood is raised in
the season. The species leaves the United States in the beginning of September,
moving off in flocks, which are formed immediately after the breeding season is
over.
Hardly any difference as to external appearance exists between the sexes.
They never attack birds or quadrupeds of any species, with the view of preying
upon them. I never saw one alight on the ground. They secure their prey as
they pass closely over it, and in so doing sometimes seem to alight,
particularly when securing a snake. The common name of the Snake represented in
the plate is the Garter Snake.
SWALLOW-TAILED HAWK, Falco furcatus, Wils. Amer. Orn., vol. vi. p. 70.
FALCO FURCATUS, Bonap. Syn., p. 31.
SWALLOW-TAILED HAWK, Falco furcatus, Aud. Orn. Biog.,
vol. i. p. 368; vol. v. p. 371.
Adult Male.
Wings very long and acute, the third quill longest, the first equal to the
fifth, the primaries widely graduated, the secondaries comparatively very short.
Tail very deeply forked, of twelve feathers, the lateral ones extremely
elongated.
Bill bluish-black above, light blue on the cere, and the edges of both
mandibles. Edges of the eyelids light blue; iris black. Feet light blue,
tinged with green; claws flesh-coloured. The head, the neck all round, and the
under parts, are white, tined with bluish-grey; the shafts of the head, neck,
and breast blackish. The rest of the plumage is black, with blue and purple
reflections.
Length 25 inches; extent of wings 51 1/2; beak along the back 1 1/4.
The female is similar to the male.
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