![]() Latham had examined specimens both in the British Museum and in the Leverian Museum. Gmelin based his description on the "New-Zealand falcon" that had been described and illustrated in 1781 by the English ornithologist John Latham. He placed it with the falcons and eagles in the genus Falco and coined the binomial name Falco novaeseelandiae. The New Zealand falcon was formally described in 1788 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. Reader's Digest (Australia) Pty Ltd, Sydney.New Zealand falcon from Buller's Birds of New Zealand, 1888 Taxonomy Reader's Digest Complete Book of Australian Birds (2nd Edition). Angus and Robertson, and the National Photographic Index of Australian Wildlife, Sydney. The Birds of Prey and Ground Birds of Australia. ![]() Breeding season: June to November in the south November to April in the north.Both sexes share the incubation of the eggs, and both care for the young, although the female performs the bulk of these duties, while the male supplies most of the food. Occasionally birds nest in open tree hollows. The nest used by the Brown Falcon is normally an old nest from another hawk species, but the species may build its own stick nest in a tree. Normally silent at rest, but gives some cackling and screeching notes when in flight. Brown Falcons feed on small mammals, insects, reptiles and, less often, small birds. Less often the species will hunt by hovering or gliding over the ground, often at great heights. The powerful bill has specialised 'tomial' teeth and matching notches for this purpose. When prey is sighted, the bird swoops down and grasps it in its claws (talons), killing the prey with a bite to the spine. The Brown Falcon ranges throughout Australia, and north to New Guinea.īrown Falcons are usually seen alone, searching for food from an exposed perch. Paler birds are usually associated with inland areas, but all the colour varieties are fairly scattered throughout the range. Birds may stay within the same areas throughout the year or may move around locally in response to changes in conditions. Around outback towns, the birds become quite tame and will allow quite close approach. The preferred habitat is open grassland and agricultural areas, with scattered trees or structures such as telegraph poles which it uses for perching. The Brown Falcon is found in all but the densest forests and is locally common throughout its range. Younger birds resemble dark adults, but have less obvious barring on the tail, and a buff-yellow colour on the face, throat and nape of the neck. Birds from the tropical north are very dark, with a paler face and undertail, while those from central Australia are paler all over. ![]() The sides of the head are brown with a characteristic tear-stripe below the eye. Generally, the upperparts are dark brown and the underparts are pale buff or cream. ![]() The Brown Falcon has a range of plumage colours, from very dark brown to light brown above and off-white below. Identificationīrown Falcons are small to medium-sized raptors (birds of prey). Instead, they have powerful hooked bills with specialised 'teeth' and matching notches which can sever neck bones with one bite. Falcons (Family Falconidae) lack a clutching foot mechanism to catch and kill prey, which characterises eagles, kites and relatives in the Family Accipitridae. ![]()
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