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Bonelli's eagle

Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata) is a large bird of prey. The common name of the bird commemorates the Italian ornithologist and collector Franco Andrea Bonelli. Bonelli is credited with gathering the type specimen, most likely from an exploration of Sardinia.[3][4] Some antiquated texts also refer to this species as the crestless hawk-eagle.[5] Like all eagles, Bonelli's eagle belongs to the family Accipitridae. Its feathered legs marked it as member of the Aquilinae or booted eagle subfamily.[6] This species breeds from Southern Europe, Africa on the montane perimeter of the Sahara Desert and across the Indian Subcontinent to Indonesia. In Eurasia, this species may be found as far west as Portugal and as far east as southeastern China and Thailand. It is usually a resident breeder.[1][6] Bonelli's eagle is often found in hilly or mountainous habitats, with rocky walls or crags, from sea level to 1,500 m (4,900 ft). Habitats are often open to wooded land and can occur in arid to semi-moist climate.[1] This eagle, though it can be considered partially opportunistic, is something of a specialist predator of certain birds and mammals, especially rabbits, galliforms and pigeons.[7] On evidence, when staple prey populations decline or are locally scarce, Bonelli's eagle switch to being an opportunistic predator of a wide variety of birds.[8] Despite its persistence over a large range and its continued classification as a least concern species by the IUCN, Bonelli's eagle has declined precipitously in various parts of its range, including almost all of its European distribution, and may face potential local extinction. The species' declines are due to widespread habitat destruction, electrocution from electricity pylons as well as persistent persecution.[9][10]

Bonelli's eagle
An adult Bonelli's eagle perched in Spain
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Genus: Aquila
Species:
A. fasciata
Binomial name
Aquila fasciata
Vieillot, 1822
Subspecies[2]
  • A. f. fasciata - Vieillot, 1822
  • A. f. renschi - (Stresemann, 1932)
Distribution of A. fasciata
Synonyms
  • Hieraaetus fasciatus
  • Aquila fasciatus

Taxonomy edit

Bonelli's eagle was described in 1822 by French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot. The common name Bonelli's eagle is for the collector of the type specimen, Franco Andrea Bonelli.[3][4] Bonelli's eagle is a member of the Aquilinae or booted eagles, a monophyletic subfamily of the accipitrid family. At least 38 species are currently housed in the subfamily, all with signature well-feathered tarsi.[11][12] The African hawk-eagle (Aquila spilogaster) was once lumped with Bonelli's eagle, with most accounts until about the 1990s listing the species as monotypical.[6][13][14] However, several morphological differences between the two species, life history discrepancies and their considerably allopatric distribution lead them to being considered separate species. Despite the differences between Bonelli's eagle and the African hawk-eagle the two species are visibly similar and are still considered sister species.[15][16] However, genetic studies have indicated that they are not closely related relative to other species pairs of the booted eagle subfamily.[17] Recent DNA research resulted in the two species being moved, in 2014,[1] to the genus Aquila from Hieraaetus, along with another dissimilar species, the Cassin's hawk-eagle (Aquila africana).[18][19][20] More specifically and surprisingly, Bonelli's, African hawk- and Cassin's hawk-eagles were found to be genetically closely related to the golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) species complex, which also includes Verreaux's eagle (Aquila verreauxii), Gurney's eagle (Aquila gurneyi) and wedge-tailed eagle (Aquila audax). These species are all conspicuously larger than Bonelli's and African hawk-eagles with differing proportions to their wings, tail and legs (in adaptation to their open country habits) and much darker coloured plumages. Furthermore, the four other traditional members of the genus Aquila have been revealed to be a separate species complex despite showing superficial similarity to the golden eagle group, i.e. being relatively large and long winged with usually dark coloring.[11][18][21][22] Beyond the nominate subspecies of Bonelli's eagle, which is found throughout its range in Eurasia, a second subspecies dwells in the Lesser Sunda Islands, A. f. renschi. The latter race is linearly smaller, and compared to other Bonelli's eagles tends to have more strikingly barred remiges and tail, the belly, thighs and crissum more boldly marked. At one time, its restricted and very isolated range have caused authors to suggest A. f. renschi may be a full species but recent studies have indicated that it is not genetically distinct enough to be considered a separate species. Furthermore, the most recent analysis couldn't rule out early introductions (possibly by ancient falconers) at least playing a part in the species presence in the Lesser Sundas, as some other established wild birds on those islands are certain to have reached there by early human introductions.[6][23]

Description edit

Size and form edit

 
Perched on a tree near a wetland in Biligiriranga Hills

Bonelli's eagle is a fairly large bird of prey and a medium-sized eagle. When still classified as a member of the genus Hieraaetus, it was considered the largest extant species therein, however, as a member of Aquila it is amongst the smallest-bodied species.[6][24][13] Amongst the currently accepted species of Aquila eagles, it is of similar size to the tawny eagle (Aquila rapax) (albeit with rather shorter wings than the tawny), slightly larger than the African hawk-eagle and notably larger than the Cassin's hawk-eagle.[6][25] Like most birds of prey, Bonelli's eagle displays reverse sexual dimorphism as the female is larger than the male to the contrary of most other kinds of birds, in this case she may average about 10% larger overall.[6] Total length in fully-grown eagles of the species can vary from 55 to 74 cm (22 to 29 in). Wingspan in males can vary from 143 to 163 cm (4 ft 8 in to 5 ft 4 in) while that of the female may vary from 156 to 180 cm (5 ft 1 in to 5 ft 11 in).[26][27][28] Prior claims put the weight of this species as 1.4 to 2.4 kg (3.1 to 5.3 lb), however this probably slightly underrepresents both their size and the sexual dimorphism of this eagle.[27][29] A large sample of full grown males from western Europe were found to average 1.94 kg (4.3 lb), with a range of 1.4 to 2.24 kg (3.1 to 4.9 lb) (sample size of 91), while 87 females were found to average 2.62 kg (5.8 lb), with a range of 2.1 to 3.03 kg (4.6 to 6.7 lb).[26] Mature males from western Europe were found to have averaged 65 cm (26 in) in total length and 155 cm (5 ft 1 in) in wingspan while mature females averaged 70.7 cm (27.8 in) in total length and 167.8 cm (5 ft 6.1 in) in wingspan.[26] Although the linear measurements reportedly increase slightly in average size in the eastern Asian part of the range, body weight was similar or slightly lower at a mean of 1.5 kg (3.3 lb) and 2.5 kg (5.5 lb) for males and females from the Indian subcontinent, respectively, though the sample size is unknown in this case.[24][30]

 
Bonelli's eagles are medium-sized eagles and have distinctly elongated legs and massive feet and talons.

Bonelli's eagles in general form appear to have a medium-sized head on a fairly long neck, a strong bill, a mid-to-longish tail and exceptionally long and well feathered legs. The combination of its well-proportioned, stout body and elongated legs may lend to descriptions of the species as “athletic” in appearance.[6][31] This eagle often perches with a very upright carriage, at times openly on a rock, a crag, tree branches or some form of post but also in the foliage of tree cover, especially when actively hunting. When perched, the wing tips tend to fall a bit short of the tail tip.[6][24] Among standard linear measurements, the wing chord of males varies from 458 to 542 mm (18.0 to 21.3 in), with an average in western Europe of 480.4 mm (18.91 in), in tail length from 237 to 287 mm (9.3 to 11.3 in), with an average of 268.1 mm (10.56 in), in tarsus length from 93 to 120 mm (3.7 to 4.7 in), with an average of 99.5 mm (3.92 in) and in total bill length from 40.4 to 45.3 mm (1.59 to 1.78 in), with an average of 43.3 mm (1.70 in). Meanwhile, females vary in wing chord from 478 to 560 mm (18.8 to 22.0 in), in tail length from 246 to 319 mm (9.7 to 12.6 in), with an average of 288.5 mm (11.36 in), in tarsus length from 93 to 127 mm (3.7 to 5.0 in), with an average of 119.1 mm (4.69 in), and in total bill length from 41.3 to 51.8 mm (1.63 to 2.04 in), with an average of 46.6 mm (1.83 in).[6][26][24][32] Two males from the A. f. renschi race measured 444 and 452 mm (17.5 and 17.8 in) in wing chord length and a single female measured 493 mm (19.4 in).[6] Bonelli's eagle is intermediate in its wing lengths and tail length proportionately between the shorter-tailed and longer-winged eagles of open country and longer-tailed and shorter-winged forest eagles, which allows to vary its hunting between short-burst, agile surprise attacks in trees and ample ground-covering pursuits in the open.[24][33][34] Its talons and feet are proportionately very large and presumably rather powerful for the eagle's size. In particular the elongated talon on its rear toe (used as a killing apparatus by almost all accipitrids), or hallux claw, is longer than that of the much larger eastern imperial eagle (Aquila heliaca) and proportionately slightly larger even than its bigger sympatric competitor, the golden eagle.[13][35] Hallux claw lengths in Bonelli's eagles from western Europe averaged 37.21 mm (1.465 in) in males and in females averaged 43.1 mm (1.70 in), and could farther range up to 47 mm (1.9 in).[26]

Colouring and identification edit

 
Juvenile Bonelli's eagle in flight, in rural Sangli district.

Adult are dark brown above, from a cold hue similar to dark chocolate to an umber hue depending on their state of molt as well as to some extent individual and regional variances, with pale margins to most feathers. These pale margins are especially broad on the median wing coverts (which thus appear lighter brown overall). Adults also have a variably-sized, irregular white patch on the mantle that can vary from nearly absent (though almost never completely so) to being quite large and extending to the upper back. The adult's tail is grey with obscure darker brown thin bars, with a broad blackish subterminal band and creamy white tip. The adult Bonelli's head is dark brown with a paler, often streaky neck and a white throat. The underside has a cream base colour with variable amounts of sparse blackish-brown streaks or drop shaped markings.[6][27][36] The adult female averages darker and more heavily patterned than the adult male, particular on the underside, a case of colour sexual dimorphism otherwise seemingly rare in booted eagles.[13][26] The streaking on this eagle is normally strongest on the breast and upper flanks while the lower belly and crissum are typically either plain or only faintly marked. Juveniles are a lighter medium brown above with variable paler edges, sometimes with a creamy patch on the back (not the mantle as in the adults) and uppertail coverts.[6][27][36] Generally, juveniles have a rusty-brown head with a darker brown around and behind their eyes. The juvenile eagle's crown is either darkly streaked or, occasionally, plain greyish. The tail of young birds is more clearly barred than the adults while the subterminal band is only negligibly thicker than the other bars. Like adults, the juvenile Bonelli's eagle's tail has a thin white tip. The juvenile is light rufous to warm buff below with minimal black streaks, which are normally confined to chest-sides.[6][27][37][38] By their 2nd summer, the young eagles are still largely the same in colouring but tend to become more patchy below with increased heavy streaking. During the gradual further development through subsequent molts, the immature eagles develop a thicker subterminal band and a paler ground colour below. Among the bare parts, adult's eyes are yellow to yellow-orange while those of the juvenile are hazel-brown. Adult plumage is obtained between the 4th and 5th years. At all ages, the cere and feet are both pale yellow.[6][27]

In flight, Bonelli's eagle is a largish raptor with a well projecting head and broad, long and somewhat square ended wings which are slightly pinched in at body with a little tapering at tips. Feather molts can make the wings look quite variable in shape with some individuals appearing rather longer and narrower winged than others. In flight, the tail appears long and broad but if pinched in can appear surprisingly narrow.[6][24][37] This species tends to fly with powerful but loose shallow beats. When gliding, they do so often on flat wings with well-spread feathers and the carpals pressed slightly forward but more so when entering a fast glide. This species soars infrequently on flat or slightly raised wings.[39] At nearly all times of the year, Bonelli's eagles quite often flies in pairs.[24] In colouring, the flying adult is dark above with a variable amount of the white marking on the mantle. The tail has faded barring (rarely perceptible) on grey with a big blotchy subterminal band and a white tip above. The markings on the tail look more or less the same when seen both from below and above. Adult Bonelli's eagles have white lesser coverts which along with the greyish tail stand out in contrast against blackish central wing band over the greater and median coverts. Also the flight feathers are faintly and thinly barred light grey-brown with paler bases, which often become paler (to a whitish hue) on the primaries inside blackish tips and leading wing coverts. In flight, juveniles are brown above with slightly darker wing ends and tips to greater coverts and greyer primary windows. Occasionally, juveniles manifest a creamy patch on back and obscure narrow U above barred tail, which even if present are only sometimes visible. Below the juvenile's wing linings are light rufous to warm buff like the body colour. Usually juveniles appear with darker tips to greater coverts forming wing-diagonals (sometimes lacking or confined to carpal area) and a small but distinct area of white on primaries against the blackish tips. Until the 3rd year, the young eagles appear more like a 1st year juvenile than an adult, but begin developing more streaks below and darker greater underwing coverts. By the 4th year, the subadult Bonelli's are increasingly similar to the adult, with an increasing subterminal band, a whiter underbody and fairly prominent underwing-diagonals. However, subadults are often still appear with a mix of paler barred juvenile type feathers and plainer darker adult feathers on the flight feathers.[6][27][37][39]

 
An adult Bonelli's eagle in flight shows its ample white mantle.

Bonelli's eagles are generally unmistakable when shape, flight and plumage are considered in combination.[6] In poor light, it is possible to mistake one with a honey buzzard, one mainly in Europe and another mainly in Asia, as these raptors are extremely polymorphic and can come surprisingly close to approximating the plumage of various more powerful raptors. The wing shape in Bonelli's eagles can at times appear similar to that of honey buzzard but the latter raptor type are usually distinctly slimmer and slighter bodied with a much smaller, slimmer head. In flight, honey buzzards often have notched rather than square ended tails, less emarginated primaries and typically they fly with their wings held more at an angle. The sympatric species of honey buzzard tend to have bolder barring on the tail and underwings, broader dark trailing wing edges and all have no pale mantle patch or darker underwing-diagonals.[6][24][37] An unlikely source of confusion is the northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis), which is usually visibly smaller with much shorter wings, a slightly longer tail, different level flight style and many distinctive plumage characteristics. Distant juvenile Bonelli's could conceivably be mistaken for the long-legged buzzard (Buteo rufinus), but the buzzard is also smaller and is shorter tailed with prominent dark carpal patches and dark trailing wing edges. Furthermore, the buzzard usually holds its wings in a noticeable dihedral when flying in a soar.[6][37][39][40] Another unlikely confusion species is the short-toed eagle (Circaetus gallicus) which roughly matches the size of Bonelli's eagles but the short-toed has larger and differently rather wedge-shaped wings with a much less dark overall pattern as well as a shorter tail, a rounder head on a shorter neck and usually a dark rather than light throat.[37][39] Also, goshawks, short-toed eagles and European honey buzzards usually frequent different habitats, more often living in more wooded and lowland habitats.[6] Bonelli's eagles may be mistaken for pale morph adult booted eagle (Hieraeetus pennatus) by inexperienced observers but, beyond being a third larger and more than twice as heavy, Bonelli's eagles are moreover distinct in plumage. Overall Bonelli's are much darker and streaker especially compared to the clearly paler flight feathers of booted eagles. Booted eagles are both whiter and more contrasting on the upperwing coverts, have whitish uppertail-coverts and have white on the wing's patagium. More similar in plumage is the juvenile Bonelli's eagle are the rare rufous morph of the booted eagle but the latter can still be told by the booted species’ narrower wings and smaller size.[24][39] In southern part of the Red Sea, vagrants (largely juveniles) may possibly come into range of the closely related and more similar African hawk-eagle, but the latter is somewhat smaller and comparatively short winged and longer tailed (the total length is similar between the species due to the African's longer tail but Bonelli's can be visibly larger bodied and rather heavier). In the African species, the adult plumage is a more contrasting, with dark slate gray upperparts, purer white underparts with dark streaking. In African hawk-eagles, juveniles compared to Bonelli's are darker above with pale wing-windows.[6][41]

Vocalizations edit

Call of Bonelli's eagle.

Bonelli's eagle is largely silent outside of breeding season and is a somewhat infrequent vocalizer even in the context of breeding. Its calls are less well studied than those of the African hawk-eagle, which although a tropical species, also generally ceases to call outside of the breeding season.[6][42][43] The main call of Bonelli's eagle is done during the courtship display and, sometimes, also at the nest. Its main call consists of a loud, shrill, somewhat far-carrying scream, yuiii-yuiii-gii-gii or a drawn-oout heeeeii-heeeeii with slight regional or even individual variations. Its call is farther carrying than the “puppy-like” one of the golden eagle and is reminiscent in pitch of that of the red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis).[6][13][38] The call may be given by both sexes. However, the female Bonelli's eagle calls most intensely when the male is delivering prey unlike the preference for vocalizing in aerial display as the male usually does. Other recorded vocalizations have included a fluted, low-pitched klu-klu-klu as well as a repeated ki ki ki in alarm. Also other barking, gurgling and grunting sounds have been reported by researchers at or near the nests.[6][34]

Range and habitat edit

 
Typically rugged environment with mixed vegetation that Bonelli's eagle is often at home in. Here in Andalusia's Sierra de las Nieves.

Bonelli's eagle have a spotty and sparse worldwide distribution currently. The species is distributed in northwestern Africa from the Anti-Atlas in Morocco northeasterly through the lower parts of the Atlas mountains in northern Algeria and northern Tunisia (and probably formerly northern Libya).[1][6][44][45][46] Beyond its African breeding range, the IUCN and others have mapped out a semi-regular wintering range for Bonelli's eagles, in coastal west Africa from southern Morocco down through Western Sahara, Mauritania and northwestern Senegal (rarely also east to Mali), although little more is reportedly known about this population and its origins and altogether the species is considered largely non-migratory.[1][47][48][49] Additionally, the species has been recorded as a vagrant in east Africa in Somalia as well.[50] In southern Europe, they range patchily through different parts of Portugal and Spain into southern France as far north as the department of Drôme.[1][51] Discontinuously, they are now seemingly solely left as breeding bird in Italy on the islands of Sardinia and Sicily.[9][52] In southeastern Europe, an isolated population possibly persists in Croatia as well as in northern and southern Macedonia (with the further possibility of spilling over into Kosovo) and spottily through different areas of Greece (possibly spilling over the borders in the west in Albania and in the east in Bulgaria), as well as Crete.[1][53][54][55][56] Out of Europe, they may be found in western and southern Turkey, Syria (possibly but most likely extirpated), the isle of Cyprus, Lebanon, Israel, western Jordan, northeastern Egypt (rarely in northern half of Sinai Peninsula) possibly but not certainly in spots in the west and south of Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Arabian Peninsula to Yemen, Oman and the United Arab Emirates.[1][6][57][58][59][60][61][62][63][64] Elsewhere in the Middle East, their range includes eastern Iraq and west, south and northeastern Iran, extending somewhat into Turkmenistan in the Kopet Dag range.[1][6][65][66]

Further east into Asia, their distribution includes eastern Afghanistan and Pakistan through most of the Indian subcontinent, where generally it is uncommon but more locally common near Nepal. On the other hand, they are absent in eastern India and only occurring as a vagrant to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.[1][6][24] In India, they are most regularly occur in certain area such as Chambal ravines, Ranthambore National Park, Chir zone of lower Kumaun Himalayas and in winter in the Keoladeo National Park of Bharatpur, Rajasthan.[24] From central Myanmar they range across into northwestern Thailand and northern Laos (though possibly only as a visitor rather than breeding in the latter two). In southern China their resident range includes Yunnan, Guangxi and Guangdong north to Yangtze river as well as rarely into Hong Kong.[1][6][67][68][69][70] Their isolated Indonesian population ranges is in the Lesser Sunda Islands, including at least Sumbawa, Timor, Wetar, Luang and Flores, however records show they've turned up on as many as 20 islands in the Lesser Sundas.[6][23][71]

Bonelli's eagles are mostly residential throughout their range but juvenile can disperse up to over several hundred kilometers. Sometimes, they are recorded at migration sites and at spots where not known to breed in winter.[72][73] Wanderings include around 700 km (430 mi) north of their regular range in France near the coast of English Channel, far from their normal haunts in Regensburg, Germany and, probably both from the Italian island populations, to northwestern Italy and Slovenia.[6][74][75][76] From their Iberian peninsula range presumably, vagrants have been reported in the Canary islands.[77] Beyond Sri Lanka, other areas the species has been known to vagrate (or perhaps rarely winter) in Asia have included Kazakhstan, the Korean peninsula, Malaysia and Cochinchina in Vietnam, as well as a record in winter 1996 on the isle of Yamdena, the latter presumably from the Lesser Sunda population.[6][23][78][79][80][81]

Habitat edit

Bonelli's eagles across their wide range tend to dwell in similar habitat types. They are mostly distributed in lands hugging large bodies of water, largely the Mediterranean Sea and northern Indian ocean. Also, to a lesser extent, they may live near the coast of the Atlantic and the Pacific as well as near the Caspian sea inland. Despite often being near seas and oceans they mostly occur in fairly arid habitats and in quite sunny areas. In some parts of Asia though semi-moist habitats may be resided in. Bonelli's eagles prefer rocky areas including lower mountains and foothills with plentiful cliffs, as well as steep sided river valleys and gorges. This species is very skilled at hunting in craggy, irregular rocky terrain.[6][24][82] Usually, extensive garrigue-type habitat such as low bushes or more substantial vegetation such as scattered trees are a common feature of residential ranges but also at times even denser woodlands. Such scrubby areas are key since they generally hold prey concentration in Mediterranean habitats.[6][83][84] However, excessive ground cover may limit hunting success so scrub is avoided when it becomes too dense.[83][85] In the Mediterranean region, forests visited by Bonelli's eagles are usually either pine forests or sclerophyll forests. Deep forests are generally avoided, however.[84][86] Although Carrascal & Seoane (2009) claimed that agricultural areas are generally avoided per their analysis in Spain, Martinez-Miranzo et al. (2016) indicated that the species was showing a growing preference for agricultural arable land and other human-modified habitats, probably as prey selection has shifted more heavily to pigeons out of necessity.[83][85] A similar growing preference for arables was also detected in Sicily as well.[86] However, urban areas are generally strongly avoided both as breeding and as foraging areas by this species.[84] Bonelli's eagles may additionally range into timbered plains or even virtually barren slopes or semi-desert, especially in areas such as Israel and India where moister valleys intersect with deserts.[6][24][84][87] Juveniles may take up temporary residence over dry cultivation, small wetland areas, coastlines or surprisingly deep woodlands.[6][24][83][84] In winter, these eagles may occur at times at lower elevation levels and more open habitats in semi-deserts and plains, where they can appear surprisingly at home, but often prefer wetter habitats such as large river mouths, marshlands and lakes, especially where these fall in existing home range, as prey is more likely to be concentrated in such areas.[6][24][83] In some areas such as southeastern Asia, some of the Indian subcontinent and in the Lesser Sundas, Bonelli's eagles may reside around tropical rainforest that is much wetter and more humid than their typical habitats, and in such areas are attracted to more sparse and rocky areas such as slopes and cliffs as well as alternately open mosaics and glades.[6][24] Usually Bonelli's eagles live at an elevation of 1,500 m (4,900 ft) or lower in Europe, to 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in their African Atlas mountain homes and to as high an elevation 3,000 m (9,800 ft) in Asia and even 3,750 m (12,300 ft) in residence in Bhutan. The main elevation where the species resides in the Himalayas falls between 1,200 and 2,000 m (3,900 and 6,600 ft).[6][88]

Behaviour and dietary ecology edit

 
Pair of Bonelli's eagle at Raigad

This species is very aerial, often given to soaring and circling over its home range. Like most raptorial birds, it mainly lives solitarily or in a breeding pair.[6][24] Bonelli's eagle is a powerful predator, and has been described as rather “bold and rapacious”.[13][34] Its primary hunting methods recall those of a powerful Accipiter such as a goshawk. Most commonly, this eagle still-hunts, often either utilizing a concealed tree perch or a lofty spot in irregular rocky terrain to watch for prey activity. Upon spotting its quarry, it often dashes out rapidly to take birds as they take off or a mammal as it runs for cover, at times making lengthy tail-chase that may continue between trees or into tree stands or bushes. Not infrequently as a latter part of a tail chase, these eagles (again reminiscent of a goshawk) will occasionally walk on the ground to obtain their prey.[6][33][89] Bonelli's eagles also hunt in a quartering flying style relatively close to the ground (in a fashion reminiscent of a harrier) or patrols hillsides for prey activity.[6][89] Bonelli's eagles will also occasionally stoop from a soaring height onto prey. Mostly, this predator takes birds from on or near the ground but some snatched them from bushes and, seldom, water. It has been known to have sufficient agility to catch some birds from active flight.[6][33][89] In one case, a Bonelli's eagle was observed to fly below a jackdaw and swoop upwards to grab it from below.[89] Tandem hunting by a lifelong pair is quite common, almost exceptionally so in this species. One eagle tends to fly directly above the other, with several cases of one eagle scattering a bird flock for the other eagle to quickly single out, in a similar style to tandem-hunting laggar falcons (Falco jugger). However, per Spanish studies, apparently tandem hunting neither improved hunting success nor were the eagles able to capture larger prey (in fact the estimated prey size by pairs was slightly lower than that taken by each mate hunting by itself) while hunting in tandem. It was hypothesized that tandem hunting is more important to the socio-sexual relations of the pair rather than capture of a significant amount of prey.[6][24][90][91] Compared to most other booted eagles, Bonelli's eagle takes a great majority of its prey alive and seldom comes to carrion or pirates foods from other raptors.[13][34] However, it will readily come to previously injured prey, especially water birds shot by duck hunters, and will readily take young animals across most prey classes.[24] Also, in Keoladeo National Park, India, Bonelli's eagles were observed to habitually follow harriers, spotted eagles and other Aquila eagles in order to capture water birds incidentally flushed during their flybys.[24][92]

 
A Bonelli's eagle that has caught a rock pigeon, one of the favored prey species.

Overall, Bonelli's eagles take a fairly wide variety of prey. Across its wide range, their prey spectrum has been known to include perhaps up to nearly 200 prey species. Dietary studies have primarily been conducted in western Europe, though some study has gone into their food habits elsewhere (being well known in Cyprus and, less so, India).[8][24][93] Brown & Amadon (1986) considered Bonelli's eagles prey size range as nearly as extensive as the most massive booted eagles, such as the golden eagle and the martial eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus) (but mainly may have been describing the African hawk-eagle that was lumped at the time).[13] Bonelli's eagles mainly hunts birds and mammals, taking reptiles and other prey types on a more local and sporadic basis. In western Europe, it is considered something of a specialist predator on rabbits and partridges, though other birds such as pigeons, gulls and corvids sometimes are taken as much or more so depending on local prey population trends.[8] Pellet analysis is considered the most reliable way to get a complete picture of Bonelli's eagle dietary habits.[94] Despite its predaceous power, typically the average size of prey taken are within average range for a raptorial bird and it may take smaller prey on average than its mildly smaller cousin, the African hawk-eagle.[6][43] In Sierra Morena, Spain, the mean size of prey taken was estimated at 630 g (1.39 lb), while in Greece the mean prey size was estimated at 877 g (1.933 lb).[95][96] A subsequent study in Spain, however, posited the mean prey size as lower than in the past, stating that prey taken by males averaged an estimated 416 g (14.7 oz) and by females at 459 g (1.012 lb), probably due to increased importance of pigeons and reduced numbers of rabbits.[91] Thus, on average, prey sizes average about 20–45% of Bonelli's eagles own weight.[91][95][96][97] Furthermore, the latter Spanish study found hunting success of Bonelli's eagles to average around 28.5%, a slightly higher hunting success rate than golden eagles (20%) or lesser spotted eagles (Clanga pomarina) (24%) but slightly lower than greater spotted eagles (Clanga clanga) (34%).[91]

Rabbits and other lagomorphs edit

 
European rabbits are strongly favored prey for Bonelli's eagles in western Europe.

More than any other, the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) is considered the most important prey species for most European Bonelli's eagles.[8] In the largest European studies, the rabbit is usually the leading prey species: such as in Catalonia, Spain where rabbits comprised 22.54% of 2254 prey items (and 33.3% of the prey biomass) and in Provence, France where rabbits made up 16.4% of 2742 prey items.[98][99] In the third largest western European study, rabbits were secondary in number to pigeons (at 18.4% of 1641 prey items) but were still the largest contributors of biomass, at 33.2%.[100] Even where non-native, such as the Aegean islands of Greece, the European rabbit dominated the foods of this eagle, comprising 40.8% by number and 46.6% by biomass of the foods.[96] In Spain, it was found that about three-quarters of studied floating juvenile Bonelli's eagles were hunting rabbits almost exclusively, apparently as they were easier to capture despite their larger size than bird prey.[101] Research determines that Bonelli's eagle are often attracted to scrub areas during hunting forays to catch sight of rabbits foraying out of vegetative cover. Since young juvenile and yearling rabbits are forced out to more open feeding spots by dominant adult rabbits, they are disproportionately often selected by Bonelli's eagles and other avian predators. Rabbits become more commonly caught during the summer when the young rabbits tend to disperse.[91][8][102] On the contrary, 86.2% of the rabbits taken in southwest Portugal were reportedly adults.[100] Most rabbits caught by Bonelli's eagle were estimated to weigh between 500 and 1,500 g (1.1 and 3.3 lb) (from the size of a kit to a smallish adult) per Spanish studies, with an estimated average weight in Spain of 857 g (1.889 lb).[8][98] A study in southeastern Spain estimated that the region's Bonelli's eagles claim about 337 rabbits during the breeding season and 237 rabbits during non-breeding during the course of a year, so despite their heavy predation barely make a dent on the overall population of rabbits (effecting less than 2.5% of the population at peak).[103] The native western European population of wild rabbit has been heavily depleted by myxomatosis and rabbit haemorrhagic disease, having been reduced by an estimated 50-70%. While the overall numbers seemingly taken by them reduced by as much as a third between 1968 and 2009, on evidence Bonelli's eagle still sought them out and hunted rabbits preferentially even during the non-breeding season when their numbers dip to their lowest.[103][104] In additional, significant numbers of other lagomorphs may be taken, extending to occasional Granada hares (Lepus granatensis) as well as accounts of Bonelli's eagles hunting European hares (Lepus europaeus) in the Greek isles and Indian hares (Lepus nigricollis) in the lower Himalayas.[24][105][106]

Gamebirds and pigeons edit

 
Bonelli's eagle with a freshly caught grey junglefowl. Gamebirds such as junglefowl are favored in the diet whenever available.

The main secondary wild prey species associated with Bonelli's eagles is the red-legged partridge (Alectoris rufa). Although at times capable of evading the attentions of eagles, this partridge occurs in conveys in the same mixed scrub that hold rabbits and is taken whenever the eagles are lucky enough to have the element of surprise. About 383 red-legged partridges were estimated to be hunted annually in one study area of southwestern Spain.[91][8][103] In the large Spanish study of Catalonia, French study of Provence and in southwest Portugal, the red-legged partridge made up 9.57%, 11.6% and 17.2% of the diet by number, respectively.[98][99][100] More so than any other prey type outside of western Europe, gamebirds such as partridges seem to be globally the most favored prey type where available for Bonelli's eagle. In Cyprus, a review of 528 prey items, revealed that the chukar (Alectoris chukar) was the main prey at 31.4% of the diet.[93] More than a dozen gamebirds have been detected in the foods of this species from Asia with at least a half dozen genera turning up in a few reviews of their ecology in India.[6][24][107] At times, even adult Indian peafowl (Pavo cristatus), potentially weighing up to 6 kg (13 lb), have been dispatched by this species.[24] In the Lesser Sunda Islands, most eye-witness accounts of their hunting habits indicate that wild (or, on some islands, introduced) green junglefowl (Gallus varius) as well as village chickens (Gallus gallus) are likely to be the most important prey.[23] Beyond gamebirds, pigeons are the other most significant avian prey type. The two larger European pigeons, the oft feral or domestic rock pigeon (Columba livia) and the common wood pigeon (Columba palumbus), are almost solely favored among this group where encountered. In southwest Portugal, pigeons have surpassed rabbits (due to their disease-based decline) to become the most important prey. Here, attempts were made to parse the proportion of feral pigeons that were taken against the number of domestic pigeons (since pigeon fanciers frequently persecute this eagle due its allegedly heavily predation of domestic birds). Of the 1497 prey items overall, feral pigeons were found to comprise 30.1% of the food by number and 26% of the biomass while the domestic types made up only 9.7% of the diet by number and 7.2% of the biomass.[100] In Catalonia, Spain, unidentified pigeons made up 17.8% of the foods and 17.4% of the biomass while identified common wood pigeons made up a further 6.24% of the number and 6.54% of the biomass, while a smaller study from the same area boosted wood pigeons to make up 11.3% of 524 prey items.[98][108] In Cyprus, rock and common wood pigeons collectively made up 27.7% of the diet.[93]

Other birds edit

 
A Bonelli's eagle being mobbed by house crows in Pakistan, as the eagle is a common predator of corvids.

Other medium-sized birds are taken widely by Bonelli's eagles. A surprisingly popular dietary choice in western Europe was for yellow-legged gulls (Larus michahellis), weighing an estimated 1,119 g (2.467 lb). In the 2724 prey items in Provence, France, this gull was second only to the rabbit in number, comprising 14.6% of the diet.[98][99] Other gulls are readily taken by Bonelli's eagles as well as wide diversity of other water birds, including rails, stone curlews, lapwings, sandpipers, tubenoses, cormorants and herons.[8][98][99][100][109][110] Water birds taken Bonelli's eagles may vary in size from wading birds as small as 48 g (1.7 oz) common sandpiper (Acitis hypoleucos) and diving birds as small as 174 g (6.1 oz) little grebes (Tachybaptus ruficollis) to those as large as adults of 3.18 kg (7.0 lb) painted storks (Ciconia leucocephala), 3.31 kg (7.3 lb) greylag goose (Anser anser) (though reportedly taken while injured by buckshot in India), and 5.5 kg (12 lb) common crane (Grus grus).[24][25][100][111][112] Corvids, of a dozen or more species and up to the size of the 1.1 kg (2.4 lb) common raven (Corvus corax), are taken in considerable numbers in differing parts of the range.[8][24][100] In Provence, France, Eurasian magpie (Pica pica) and western jackdaw (Corvus monedula) made up 10.17% and 9.95% of the diet respectively.[99] In Portugal, Eurasian jay comprised 7.5% by number but only 2.7% of the biomass.[100] Corvids were the leading prey for Bonelli's eagles in Georgia, with the Eurasian magpie comprising 12.3% of the diet (though largely young were reportedly taken) and carrion crows (Corvus corone) making up a further 10.76%.[113] In the Aegeans of Greece, carrion crows comprised 14.1% of the prey by number and 8.8% of the biomass, while south of Turkey in Cyprus, western jackdaw comprised 7.6% of the foods.[93][96] Other assorted avian prey groups taken in usually smaller numbers include cuckoos, swifts, bustards, nightjars, bee-eaters, rollers, hoopoes. woodpeckers and parrots.[24][8][98][100][109][113][114][115] Among passerines, which are usually quite secondary besides corvids, they've been known to hunt various larks (up to nearly 11% of the diet in Georgia), shrikes, swallows, accentors, Old World flycatchers (at least 10 different species), thrushes, pipits, starlings, buntings, finches and Old world sparrows.[8][24][86][98][99][96][100][109][111][113][116][117][118] In total, some 130 bird species may be taken and birds as a whole almost always form the most ample part of the diet compared to other classes: 69.5% and 80.97% of the biomass in the south of France, 67.7% in Georgia and 62.6% in Catalonia, Spain.[8][98][99][108][109][113]

Other assorted prey edit

Beyond the high significance of rabbits (and sometimes other lagomorphs), other mammals are rarely as important or diverse in the diet of Bonelli's eagles as birds are. A couple of rodents can be locally significant secondary prey, however. The red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris), with a mean estimated mass in Spain of 241 g (8.5 oz), was reported in almost all western Europe studies, with about 130 reported as taken in studies from Provence, France.[98][99] The black rat (Rattus rattus), of similar size to the squirrel at an average of about 200 g (7.1 oz) was an important secondary food source in islands south and east of Greece, being the second most common prey species in Cyprus (15.5% of 528 prey items) and fifth most important prey species in the Aegean islands.[93][96] In northwestern Africa such as Morocco, it was reported that the fat sand rat (Psammomys obesus), another rodent of similar size, was amongst the favorite foods locally for Bonelli's eagles.[119] Other rodent species known in the diet of Bonelli's eagles have included other squirrels, gundis, assorted mice, voles, dormice and blind mole rats.[8][99][120][121][122][123] Beyond a few species of hedgehogs, additional mammalian prey for this species, although seldom taken, can be relatively large. They've been known to attack the young of various ungulates include blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra), chinkara (Gazella bennettii), domestic goats (Capra aegagrus hircus) and domestic sheep (Ovis aries).[24][8][124] In the Aegean islands, live-caught but often young and small goat kids comprised 8.5% of the foods and 24.3% of the biomass at nests.[96] Among carnivorans, Bonelli's eagles have reportedly attacked red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and wildcats (Felis silvestris) (probably mostly kits and kittens of these two species) in western Europe as well as stone martens (Martes foina) and assorted weasels. Meanwhile, adult Bengal fox (Vulpes bengalensis) have reportedly been caught in India.[6][8][24][125] In France and Spain, mammals overall comprised 34.8% and 26.1% of the diet, respectively, whereas in Georgia they made up 15.4% of the diet.[99][108][109][113] Reptiles are usually secondary prey throughout the range. Though they are known to hunt snakes, Bonelli's eagles rarely hunt them and generally seem to pursue lizards by preference. In Cyprus, starred agamas (Laudakia stellio) comprised 5.9% of the food, unidentified Lacerta lizards 10.76% of diet in Georgia (and reptiles altogether adding up to 16.9% of the food by number). Relatively large adult specimens of ocellated lizard (Timon lepidus), at 228 g (8.0 oz) in mean body mass, made up 3.97% of the biomass and 7.05% by number in Catalonia, Spain.[98][93][113] Desert monitor (Varanus griseus) and probably assorted other monitor lizards were reportedly amongst the leading prey for Bonelli's eagles in several parts of India.[24][107][117] Minor prey includes toads and possibly a few other types of amphibian. Potentially insects and/or other invertebrates may be taken but these may incidentally consumed (i.e. undigested food from the stomachs of prey).[99][120]

Interspecies predatory relationships edit

 
While other birds of prey present some competition for Bonelli's eagles, intraspecific conflicts are the most significant. Here an adult escorts out a wandering juvenile from its range.

Bonelli's eagles frequently occur in range with multiple other eagles and competing predators. Almost certainly the most direct competitor from their European range to the Middle East is their much larger cousin, the golden eagle. Habitat preferences overlap between these two eagles with both species favoring rocky habitats, though the golden eagle regularly dwells at slightly higher elevations with alpine meadows (though is as adaptive to low elevations as Bonelli's so long as habitat is favorable and undisturbed).[21][95] Competition between the eagles has been reported in particular from Spain, in areas such as Sierra Morena. Both species excluded each other from mutual territories and had broadly overlapping food habits. However, Bonelli's eagle took more birds and golden eagle more singularly hunted rabbits. Mean distance between nests on a plot of 2,200 km2 (850 sq mi) was found to be 10.2 km (6.3 mi) for 8 pairs of golden eagles and 11.4 km (7.1 mi) for 10 pairs of Bonelli's. The two can co-exist with sufficiently large ranges as long as they are able to maintain their own range, with the existence of trophic segregation (by size and the more avian based diet of Bonelli's) and the lag in the breeding periods, as these natural mechanisms would allow the coexistence of both species in the mountain.[95][126] Cases of golden eagles taking over prior Bonelli's eagles territories have been reported but usually golden eagles only takes up the prior Bonelli's territory when the latter vanishes due to unrelated (often anthropogenic) causes not direct competition or usurpation. A minor negative effect has been probably correlated with golden eagles not infrequently attacking and displacing juvenile and subadult Bonelli's eagles and can tend to be behaviorally dominant in keeping with its larger size. This in turn presumably hampers the ability of Bonelli's to expand their range after declines and stabilize their population.[127][128][129][130][131] Further east, in Israel, Bonelli's and golden eagles are competitors as well. In the dry, barren Negev desert, golden eagles nests were found 13.1 km (8.1 mi) apart and Bonelli's were scarce. In the Judean desert, which has more annual rainfall and more available prey, the distance between golden eagle nests averaged 16 km (9.9 mi) and Bonelli's eagle easily outnumbered them. Apparently, Bonelli's eagle exceptionally outcompeted its larger cousin here due to a subtle topographic variation in the habitat.[87] In Spain, Bonelli's eagles share cliff habitats beyond golden eagles also with peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus), common ravens, Eurasian eagle-owls (Bubo bubo) and three species of vulture. The eagles tend to dominate the smaller carnivorous birds in most circumstances, even the swifter peregrine.[132] However, the still larger griffon vulture (Gyps fulvus) was apparently a routine territory and nest usurper of other birds of prey, displacing golden eagles, bearded vultures (Gypaetus barbatus) and Egyptian vultures (Neophron percnopterus) from their nests as well as 9 out of 23 eyries built by Bonelli's eagles in the study area.[133] Despite their prior claimed “dominance” over the swift falcons, at least three cases have been observed of peregrine falcons usurping Bonelli's eagle (presumably through routine harassment and dive-bombing) nests in Spain.[134] Beyond golden eagles, peregrines and griffon vultures, tawny owls (Strix alucco) have been known to take over old Bonelli's eagle nests.[135]

European rabbits have a huge range of predators in the Iberian peninsula, with at least 30 different species known to hunt the once densely-populated lagomorph.[8][103][102] Besides the overlapping ranges of Bonelli's and golden eagles, most other birds of prey that hunt rabbits extensively are partitioned from the potential depletive effect of competition by differences in habitat preferences, hunting techniques and temporal activity. Beyond the specialized mammalian predator, the Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus), some of the other most specialized predators of wild rabbits are Bonelli's eagles, golden eagles, Spanish imperial eagles (Aquila adalberti) and Eurasian eagle-owls.[8][103][102][136][137][138] A comparative study indicated that the golden eagle diet was comprised 40% by rabbits, while they made up 49% for eagle-owls, 50% for Spanish imperial eagles and 61% for Bonelli's eagle.[139] Elsewhere, higher import has been applied for rabbits in the local diet of golden eagles as well as for Spanish imperial eagles.[95][140] The mean size of rabbits taken increases more or less with the size of the avian predator: 662 g (1.459 lb) for northern goshawks, 857 g (1.889 lb) for Bonelli's eagles, 1,000 g (2.2 lb) for Eurasian eagle-owls and 1,360 g (3.00 lb) for golden eagles.[21][95][141][142]

Along with northern goshawks, golden eagles and Eurasian eagle-owls, Bonelli's eagle is considered a “super predator” in the European region due to its habit of hunting other predators. In contrast to the other birds of prey, they are somewhat less commonly at high predator status compared to goshawks (most common predator of other diurnal raptors in studies), golden eagles (most common predator of mesopredator mammals), and eagle-owl (most common predator of other owls).[143] However, they are relatively common predators of other diurnal birds of prey, per overall analysis they took such prey somewhat more regularly than did golden eagles in Europe.[143][144] Among the other accipitrids that Bonelli's eagle have been known to hunt include the Indian spotted eagle (Clanga hastata), European honey buzzard (Pernis apivorus), red kite (Milvus milvus), black kite (Milvus migrans), western marsh harrier (Circus aeruginosus), Montagu's harrier (Circus pygargus), hen harrier (Circus cyaenus), Eurasian sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus), shikra (Accipiter badius), northern goshawk, long-legged buzzard and common buzzard (Buteo buteo).[8][24][13][108][109][116][145] Among falcons, they've been known to prey upon common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus), lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) and peregrine falcon and as for owls, tawny owl (Strix alucco), little owl (Athene noctua), long-eared owl (Asio otus), short-eared owl (Asio flammeus) and most impressively of all, in at least one instance, an adult Eurasian eagle-owl.[8][24][86][98][109][146] Although usually classed as an apex predator, as in most cases of apex predators in competitive environments, Bonelli's eagles sometimes infrequently fall victim to interspecific killings and predation as well.[147] Eurasian eagle-owls have been known to prey on Bonelli's nestlings a few times and possibly also an adult at least once.[148][149] In one case, a subadult male golden eagle preyed upon an adult male Bonelli's eagle.[150] Stone martens are also counted amongst the predators of nests (exclusively as egg thieves) in Spain.[151]

Breeding edit

 
mating on the Southern bank of the Chambal River, Uttar Pradesh, India.

Pair formation and nest distribution edit

Bonelli's eagles, like most but not all raptorial birds, generally lives solitarily or in pairs. They usually mate for life.[152] Territories are maintained through aerial displays which often involve calling, single or mutual high circling and, most frequently, sky-dancing in the area of eyrie. During this species’ sky-dances, one or other of the eagle pair plunges headlong from a great height, with its wings almost closed, before checking and rising again on stiff wings, circling to regain original altitude and diving again. The sky-dance sequence may be repeated up to 5-10 times. Occasionally but usually infrequently, territorial exclusions escalate into talon grappling between a territorial bird and an intruder.[6][153] Aerial display extend with diminished frequency into the incubation and early nestling periods.[24] In Spain, the average estimated size of a pairs home range was a very large 44.2 km2 (17.1 sq mi), though only 27.3% of their home ranges on average were used in all seasons.[154][155] Home ranges in Portugal were estimated to average up to 130 km2 (50 sq mi).[156] On Cyprus, the mean nearest neighbor distance was 7.4 km (4.6 mi) with 0.52-0.65 pairs per 100 km2 (39 sq mi).[58] Contrary to many other raptor species, it was found that were no significant relationship between the density of their main prey species and the distance of the neighbouring pairs.[157] A dead or missing mate may be quickly replaced and mature adults have additionally been seen breeding with subadults.[24]

 
Paired Bonelli's eagles

Nests edit

 
A Bonelli's eagle's egg, from the collection Museum Wiesbaden
 
Aquila fasciata - MHNT

The breeding season of Bonelli's eagles is from late January/February to July in the western part of the range and November–August/September (peaking December–May) in the Indian subcontinent and Myanmar. Both members of the pair may dwell around the eyrie for up to 2–3 months before breeding. Their nest is a huge structure of branches and sticks, scarcely smaller than those built by eagles twice the size of this species, though rarely as great in depth as some old nests of the larger eagles. Often the nest completely obscures the sitting female from view unless it is seen at the same level or higher than the nest. Nest size can average up to 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) across and 60 cm (24 in) deep but with repeated use the nest can range up to 2 m (6 ft 7 in) in both directions (record sized nest in India was 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) in height). Tree nests tend to average larger than those placed on cliff ledges.[6][24][13] One nest in the Gir forest was used periodically used over the course of 30 years.[24] While they may line their active nest with greenery, it is less frequent and sparser where present than in many other birds of prey.[6] Nesting locales are often high on cliff ledge or alternatively at 5 to 40 m (16 to 131 ft) (usually over 10 m (33 ft)) above the ground in large trees.[6] Very rarely, nests may too be on the perimeter of buildings.[158] The trees selected are often the tallest and/or most densely foliaged in a given stand.[6][13] Their close cousin, the African hawk-eagle, usually nests on trees and rarely utilizes crags and alternate nesting sites as does Bonelli's.[13] Historically, throughout their range in western Europe, Bonelli's eagles were considered almost obligate cliff nesters on almost any rocky environment, from precipitous mountain ranges, canyons over river valleys, even down to low rocky rubble to sea cliffs.[159] However, up to 52 tree nests for the species have now been recorded in southwest Portugal. Often the Portuguese nesting eagles used invasive Tasmanian blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus) (44.2% of the time) while a further 21.2% were on cork oak (Quercus suber) not to mention some that were placed on large shrubs, i.e. strawberry trees (Arbutus unedo). The mean height of Portuguese tree nest was 23.9 m (78 ft). The Portuguese study further found 67.3% of the tree nests to be on hill slopes and 4.5 m (15 ft) average height for lowest branch, both presumably as anti-predator measure.[156] By 2017, the expansion to using tree nests had bolstered the southwest Portugal population considerably.[160] In the 1990s, the first ever tree nest was found in the relative Bonelli's eagle stronghold of Catalonia, Spain, while another singular tree nest was also found in the south of France.[161][162] In India, Bonelli's eagles seem to readily switch between tree and cliff nests. The eagles of areas such as Maharashtra and the Western Ghats are usually partial to nesting in trees while in the Deccan Peninsula, Indo-Gangetic plain and Himalayan foothills, the eagles alternated between nesting on cliffs and lofty trees including red silk cotton (Bombax ceiba), sacred fig (Ficus religiosa), Javan plum (Syzygium cumini) or Dalbergia ssp. Bonelli's eagles in India may also nest close to human habitations if disturbance is low, such as in Saurashtra and in Himalayan foothills, in the latter often in large chir pine (Pinus roxburghii) near villages. In Pakistan, the species has been known to use seaside cliffs. Also, in the Indian desert zone, Bonelli's eagles are known to use relatively low rocky hills with shallow gradients, making the nest ledges relatively easy to access.[24][163] On Cyprus, 70% of nests were in Turkish pines (Pinus brutia) at a mean elevation of 625 m (2,051 ft).[58] Often this eagle uses the same nest in successive years but also alternate nest may be used. Often somewhere between 1 and 5 nests may be built by the species on their home range. Like other birds of prey, the presence of alternate nest may be a strategy to cope with ectoparasitic infestations within the nest.[13][134] The construction of a new nest takes roughly a month's time.[13]

Development of young edit

The clutch size is usually 2, though one egg is not infrequently laid. This species seldom lays three eggs, though there are now a few records of this and even three large eaglets recorded in a nest.[164][165] Their eggs are largely white but are often sparingly spotted and streaked with brown. In a sample of 120, egg height was measured as 62 to 76.5 mm (2.44 to 3.01 in), with an average of 69 mm (2.7 in) by 48 to 57.3 mm (1.89 to 2.26 in) in diameter, with an average of 54 mm (2.1 in).[13] Egg laying dates peak from February to April in France, January in North Africa while in India, the peak may be December to April, sometimes even into May (as in the Himalayas).[6][24][13] Incubation lasts for 37 to 41 days in Europe but is estimated at a more prolonged 40–45 days in the more tropical Indian subcontinent.[6][24] Incubation is mainly done by the female (about 90% of the time) while males mainly capture food.[13] Upon hatching, the eaglets are altricial initially. The first feathers start appearing through the white down at 25–35 days and practically cover the body by 45 days. By the latter stage, the eaglets can normally feed themselves but may be variable in learning ability. Fledgling period is at 56 to 65 days of age (rarely as late as 70 days).[6][24] The average age at fledging in Spain was estimated at 63 days.[166] Female broods about 90% of the time for first two weeks after first hatching but this decreases to 50% by the end of those weeks. The female attacks potential predators that come near the nest including other raptors. In the Indian subcontinent, they've been seen to escort oriental honey buzzards, crested serpent eagles (Spilornis cheela), bearded vultures, as well as Gyps vultures, conspecifics and corvids away from the eyrie vicinity while the presence of northern plains gray langurs (Semnopithecus entellus) was observed to provoke a fierce defensive attack. However, unlike African hawk-eagles, Bonelli's eagles rarely attack humans at the nest.[6][24] Males at times have been observed to take a share of the brooding and rarely even feeding the eaglet(s).[13] Caches of food are often stored early on but are quickly depleted and rarely still present latter in the nesting period when the eaglets growth accelerates.[24][167] The female lingers near nest even after brooding stage. However, the female also tends to take part in prey capture relatively early in fledging period compared to many other eagles.[13] In the latter third of the post-fledging period, the parents are rarely in attendance except when bringing food. The dependence of the young eagles may extend for about 8 to 11 weeks, but has individually varied from 50 to over 120 days. Research on conditions and habitat composition has indicated variation in the post-fledgling dependence stage is derived from habitat quality or from parental skill. However, fledgling body condition seemed to play no major role in this stage. On evidence, the young eagles drift from their parents care independently.[6][13][168][169][170][166]

 
Fully fledged juvenile eagles lingering in the vicinity of their nest.

Post-breeding edit

One of the most significant portions of Bonelli's eagles lifecycle is the dispersal stage. The dispersal and post-dispersal stage has been studied at length in western Europe, with a surprising amount of individual variation being found. Here, dispersal occurred at an average age of 142 days (occasionally up to 163 days old) with a varying distance of dispersal from nest to settlement area were from 50 to 536 km (31 to 333 mi). The average distance of dispersal in France was 158 km (98 mi). Anywhere from 58% of 47 to 87% of 7 juveniles survived per these radio-tagged studies.[171][172][173] The high distance dispersal of the juvenile Bonelli's eagles may potentially benefit gene flow.[174][175][176] At least 20 communal roosts for post-dispersal juvenile Bonelli's eagles were found in Spain. Each were found to house between 2 and 11 eagles of the species, with mean of 5.1. It was also found the juveniles were usually sharing many of the roosts with Spanish imperial eagle juveniles as well (in 91.4% of roost) though each species clustered separately in different parts of the trees or bushes. More infrequently, assorted other species of raptor would join the juvenile eagle roosts at dusk.[177]

Breeding success and causes of failures edit

 
Bonelli's eagle feeding its eaglet with a partridge.

The breeding success of Bonelli's eagles may vary considerably. Mean fledgling success on Cyprus was found to be 1.44 per pair.[58] In Sicily, breeding success was found to vary 0.67 (in the 1990s) to 1.37 (in the 2000s after some protection) and productivity of successful pairs was from 1.42 (2000s) to 1.51 (1990s).[178][179] Of 1506 breeding attempts in western Europe, 65.7% were successful. Of these successful ones, 39.8% produced one fledgling, 59.7% produced two and only 0.5% produced three fledglings.[180][181][182] Like many birds of prey, siblicide or cainism has occurred, wherein the eldest nestling repeatedly attacks, often killing and occasionally eating their younger siblings. In about 20% of nest, the second chick survives, therefore this species is classed as a facultative cainist rather than an obligate one. On evidence, egg laying and hatching may grow more asynchronous when frequently interrelated outside stressors such as food supply, habitat disturbance and poor weather are applied, all of which may increase the likelihood of cainism.[13][180][183] Whether the young have died by siblicide or via other means, Bonelli's eagles have been known to consume their own dead nestlings on a couple of occasions.[184] On evidence, the younger eaglets of Bonelli's eagles and other species in areas where threatened may too survive by human intervention, wherein they remove the chicks and either raise them in semi-captivity or introduce them to a new set of parents.[185] In India, habitat and the resulting prey composition were found to be the most significant drivers of breeding success. In protected areas such as Ranthambore National Park, nest often produce two fledglings, while in degraded areas such as the Kumaun division, they often produce just one. Fledgling number here was thought to be driven primarily by prey carrying capacity of a given area.[24] When an almost fledged young was stolen by village children in India, 15 hours later, researchers introduced another which was accepted by parents. In a similar case, another Indian pair rejected its own nearly fledged eaglet after it had been stolen, however with repeated attempts was accepted and successfully fledged.[186] When poachers stole some eagles in Spain, a couple of pairs were found to successfully lay replacement clutches (each with the typical 2 eggs) some 25–30 days later.[187][188] A western European review of 1052 breeding attempts indicated a negative correlation with colder temperatures and heavier rains during nesting. Therefore, in more temperate areas such as northern Spain, the average breeding success was lower and the young often dispersed southwards due to the cooler climate.[189][190]

Conservation and rehabilitation edit

 
Artwork from a 19th-century German Natural History book

Bonelli's eagles have sharply declined, at least locally inexorably and drastically, in much of their range. In the 1990s, it was estimated that the entire west Palearctic held about 2000-3000 pairs with the Iberian peninsula (750-845 pairs) and northwestern Africa (1000 or so) being the core areas. In the mid-1990s, it was indicated that there were 938-1039 pairs in all of Europe, about 75-80% of which in Spain with an estimated 75–90 in Portugal, 35–45 in Greece, 29 in France, 15–20 in Italy, and a handful each in Croatia and Albania.[6] By the 2000s, with some continued declines and minor local recoveries (as well as more comprehensive surveying) resulted in an estimate of 1500 pairs in Europe, still far less than historic numbers (at least a 30% reduction since the 1950s) and qualifying the species for local critically endangered status. Local extinction is probable in many if not all populations yet there is no overarching action plan for conserving the species.[1][9] On evidence, populations in core protected areas have increased but fringe areas, important especially to vagrant juveniles, continue to show strong declines and high mortality rates.[191] Although listed today on the IUCN Red List as breeding species there, Bonelli's eagle may be extinct as a nesting species in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[1][192] As of 2010, 20 to 22 breeding territories have been found in Sicily and it was thought that this population holds about 95% of the remaining Italian population. Sicilian eagles per study were shown to have high adult mortality (10.2%) and at least 17 pairs in 2010 failed to breed altogether.[9][86] In their Spanish stronghold, the species has declined or disappeared in 27 out of 40 provinces since 1980, with over 20% reduction in north and central parts. The coastal sierras of east and south Iberia hold highest European densities at 1 pair per 100–200 km2 (39–77 sq mi), but once formerly it held a pair per 60 km2 (23 sq mi) in the 1970s.[6][10][193] In the Region of Murcia, Spain, Bonelli's eagle was considered the second most threatened raptor species, behind only the lesser kestrel.[194] In the Province of Burgos in northern Spain the number of pairs reduced from 25–27 to 10 between 1980 and 1996. Of 100 breeding attempts from 1988 to 1996, only 0.3 were successful and average success rate was only 0.35, despite surplus feeding beginning after 1992.[195] From 200 or more pairs in Greece in the early 1980s, the population has fallen to less than 50.[6] What was roughly estimated to be about 50 pairs (estimated earlier at up to 100), in Turkey in the late 1980s to the 1990s, has recently been revised based on research to only 20-35 pairs in isolated small pockets.[6][61] In Israel, 28 pairs of Bonelli's eagle were known to be present in 1989 but little information has been obtained from the rest of Middle East and from Asia. Israeli populations are estimated to have been halved in size. By 2001, only 15 pairs were known to breed in Israel. Besides the four species that have become locally extinct in Israel, it is likely that Bonelli's eagle is the most endangered Israeli raptor.[1][6][196][197] It was estimated that the maximum number in Asia is likely around 35,000 pairs but it could be well less than half of that. Perhaps the only factor preventing authorities such as the IUCN from uplisting Bonelli's eagle to a more severe status is due to lack of extensive research on their population in the Asian range. Strong declines in Asia may be occurring as well.[1][6] A bird survey of a large area of Uttarakhand, India where the species was historically present failed to find any signs of remaining Bonelli's eagles.[198] In Gujarat, India, an analysis from the 1990s determined that the species was increasingly scarce due to human disturbance and logging.[199]

In multiple parts of the range, certainly in western Europe as well as Cyprus, Bonelli's eagles face a high degree of persecution by hunters, gamekeepers and pigeon-fanciers. Shooting and poisoning of this species persist extensively into the 21st century.[58][200] Habitat alteration and destruction (e.g. development of roads, intensified agriculture, irrigation of dry fields) in addition to reduced prey numbers and human disturbance in the nesting area are ongoing and increasing threats everywhere for this eagle.[6][201] Even human activity such as large quantities of people on holiday has been shown to have a negative effect on this eagle as they may alter their range to avoid such activity.[202] From 1990 to 1996, 424 dead Bonelli's eagles in Spain were recorded, 55% died due to electrocution and 26% due to poisoning and shooting. Adults were mainly killed via persecution whereas most juveniles died by electrocution. In Catalonia and central Spain, 50% and 86% due to electrocution whereas persecution was more major in Levante and Green Spain (accounting for 52% and 43% of deaths).[203] Abandonment of territories could not be correlated to interspecific competition but was linked to human influence and persecution.[204] In Sicily, the main threats are thought to be habitat fragmentation and intensifying agriculture. Previously egg-collectors were semi-regularly exacerbating the reduction of the species on Sicily, but this behaviour has seemingly declined mercifully in recent years.[9][86][205] Given its relative scarcity in Crete, only a small number of Bonelli's eagles were recovered dead from persecution when compared to other raptors. However, death through shooting and poisoning is surely not sustainable given the low population there.[206] Increasing overhead power line collisions resulting in electrocution from highly dangerous pylons are a major cause of mortality, resulting in unsustainably high population turnover. In one Spanish study area, 56% of juveniles and 13% of adults were killed by electrocution. In France, 44% of radio-tagged post-dispersal juveniles were killed by electrocution.[207][208][209] Wind farms in Spain are a potential growing source of changed territories and deaths for Bonelli's eagles but they are likely to be less effected locally than golden eagles.[210] Lead poisoning from bullets in injured small game, which have been associated with high lead levels in eagle feathers in several parts of their range.[211] Research from western Europe and northeastern Africa has indicated low genetic diversity in these populations, which cause concerns of a population bottleneck for the species in these former strongholds.[212]

Conservation efforts edit

Research has indicated that the most significant predicted cause to a strong recovery for Bonelli's eagles in Europe would be conservation of appropriate habitats, followed by higher survival rates for territorial and non-territorial eagles.[213][214] It was suggested in 2008 that reducing risk of electric powerline collisions and reducing persecution are the most immediate and significant measures that should be taken to retain Bonelli's eagles in Spain.[173][215][216] Research indicated that 99% of avian mortality would be reduced by modifying only 27% of the pylons in areas inhabited by the eagles.[207] As reported by 2015, biologists in coordination with local authorities started to properly insulate dangerous powerlines in green areas in order to help converse this and other threatened birds. It was shown that the local population growth rates increased quickly as a result (from 0.82 to 0.98). However, this study showed an apparent increase of anthropogenic mortality from other causes, such as car collisions, in sync with reduced electrocution.[217] It was estimated that for stage of 2008–2014, 0.28 and 0.64 of mortality was still due to electrocution for territorial and non-territorial eagles.[218] In further efforts to converse the species locally, Spanish researchers have provided supplemental feedings to these eagles, which may improve their odds of successfully producing young.[219]

References edit

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External links edit

  • Bonelli's eagle in Spain
  • Bonelli's eagle Conservation Biology Team of the University of Barcelona
  • BirdLife species factsheet for Aquila fasciata
  • "Aquila fasciata". Avibase.  
  • "Bonelli's eagle media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Bonelli's eagle photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Interactive range map of Aquila fasciata at IUCN Red List maps
  • Audio recordings of Bonelli's eagle on Xeno-canto.
  • Life Bonelli

bonelli, eagle, aquila, fasciata, large, bird, prey, common, name, bird, commemorates, italian, ornithologist, collector, franco, andrea, bonelli, bonelli, credited, with, gathering, type, specimen, most, likely, from, exploration, sardinia, some, antiquated, . Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata is a large bird of prey The common name of the bird commemorates the Italian ornithologist and collector Franco Andrea Bonelli Bonelli is credited with gathering the type specimen most likely from an exploration of Sardinia 3 4 Some antiquated texts also refer to this species as the crestless hawk eagle 5 Like all eagles Bonelli s eagle belongs to the family Accipitridae Its feathered legs marked it as member of the Aquilinae or booted eagle subfamily 6 This species breeds from Southern Europe Africa on the montane perimeter of the Sahara Desert and across the Indian Subcontinent to Indonesia In Eurasia this species may be found as far west as Portugal and as far east as southeastern China and Thailand It is usually a resident breeder 1 6 Bonelli s eagle is often found in hilly or mountainous habitats with rocky walls or crags from sea level to 1 500 m 4 900 ft Habitats are often open to wooded land and can occur in arid to semi moist climate 1 This eagle though it can be considered partially opportunistic is something of a specialist predator of certain birds and mammals especially rabbits galliforms and pigeons 7 On evidence when staple prey populations decline or are locally scarce Bonelli s eagle switch to being an opportunistic predator of a wide variety of birds 8 Despite its persistence over a large range and its continued classification as a least concern species by the IUCN Bonelli s eagle has declined precipitously in various parts of its range including almost all of its European distribution and may face potential local extinction The species declines are due to widespread habitat destruction electrocution from electricity pylons as well as persistent persecution 9 10 Bonelli s eagleAn adult Bonelli s eagle perched in SpainConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder AccipitriformesFamily AccipitridaeGenus AquilaSpecies A fasciataBinomial nameAquila fasciataVieillot 1822Subspecies 2 A f fasciata Vieillot 1822 A f renschi Stresemann 1932 Distribution of A fasciataSynonymsHieraaetus fasciatus Aquila fasciatus Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Size and form 2 2 Colouring and identification 2 3 Vocalizations 3 Range and habitat 3 1 Habitat 4 Behaviour and dietary ecology 4 1 Rabbits and other lagomorphs 4 2 Gamebirds and pigeons 4 3 Other birds 4 4 Other assorted prey 4 5 Interspecies predatory relationships 5 Breeding 5 1 Pair formation and nest distribution 5 2 Nests 5 3 Development of young 5 4 Post breeding 5 5 Breeding success and causes of failures 6 Conservation and rehabilitation 6 1 Conservation efforts 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editBonelli s eagle was described in 1822 by French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot The common name Bonelli s eagle is for the collector of the type specimen Franco Andrea Bonelli 3 4 Bonelli s eagle is a member of the Aquilinae or booted eagles a monophyletic subfamily of the accipitrid family At least 38 species are currently housed in the subfamily all with signature well feathered tarsi 11 12 The African hawk eagle Aquila spilogaster was once lumped with Bonelli s eagle with most accounts until about the 1990s listing the species as monotypical 6 13 14 However several morphological differences between the two species life history discrepancies and their considerably allopatric distribution lead them to being considered separate species Despite the differences between Bonelli s eagle and the African hawk eagle the two species are visibly similar and are still considered sister species 15 16 However genetic studies have indicated that they are not closely related relative to other species pairs of the booted eagle subfamily 17 Recent DNA research resulted in the two species being moved in 2014 1 to the genus Aquila from Hieraaetus along with another dissimilar species the Cassin s hawk eagle Aquila africana 18 19 20 More specifically and surprisingly Bonelli s African hawk and Cassin s hawk eagles were found to be genetically closely related to the golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos species complex which also includes Verreaux s eagle Aquila verreauxii Gurney s eagle Aquila gurneyi and wedge tailed eagle Aquila audax These species are all conspicuously larger than Bonelli s and African hawk eagles with differing proportions to their wings tail and legs in adaptation to their open country habits and much darker coloured plumages Furthermore the four other traditional members of the genus Aquila have been revealed to be a separate species complex despite showing superficial similarity to the golden eagle group i e being relatively large and long winged with usually dark coloring 11 18 21 22 Beyond the nominate subspecies of Bonelli s eagle which is found throughout its range in Eurasia a second subspecies dwells in the Lesser Sunda Islands A f renschi The latter race is linearly smaller and compared to other Bonelli s eagles tends to have more strikingly barred remiges and tail the belly thighs and crissum more boldly marked At one time its restricted and very isolated range have caused authors to suggest A f renschi may be a full species but recent studies have indicated that it is not genetically distinct enough to be considered a separate species Furthermore the most recent analysis couldn t rule out early introductions possibly by ancient falconers at least playing a part in the species presence in the Lesser Sundas as some other established wild birds on those islands are certain to have reached there by early human introductions 6 23 Description editSize and form edit nbsp Perched on a tree near a wetland in Biligiriranga HillsBonelli s eagle is a fairly large bird of prey and a medium sized eagle When still classified as a member of the genus Hieraaetus it was considered the largest extant species therein however as a member of Aquila it is amongst the smallest bodied species 6 24 13 Amongst the currently accepted species of Aquila eagles it is of similar size to the tawny eagle Aquila rapax albeit with rather shorter wings than the tawny slightly larger than the African hawk eagle and notably larger than the Cassin s hawk eagle 6 25 Like most birds of prey Bonelli s eagle displays reverse sexual dimorphism as the female is larger than the male to the contrary of most other kinds of birds in this case she may average about 10 larger overall 6 Total length in fully grown eagles of the species can vary from 55 to 74 cm 22 to 29 in Wingspan in males can vary from 143 to 163 cm 4 ft 8 in to 5 ft 4 in while that of the female may vary from 156 to 180 cm 5 ft 1 in to 5 ft 11 in 26 27 28 Prior claims put the weight of this species as 1 4 to 2 4 kg 3 1 to 5 3 lb however this probably slightly underrepresents both their size and the sexual dimorphism of this eagle 27 29 A large sample of full grown males from western Europe were found to average 1 94 kg 4 3 lb with a range of 1 4 to 2 24 kg 3 1 to 4 9 lb sample size of 91 while 87 females were found to average 2 62 kg 5 8 lb with a range of 2 1 to 3 03 kg 4 6 to 6 7 lb 26 Mature males from western Europe were found to have averaged 65 cm 26 in in total length and 155 cm 5 ft 1 in in wingspan while mature females averaged 70 7 cm 27 8 in in total length and 167 8 cm 5 ft 6 1 in in wingspan 26 Although the linear measurements reportedly increase slightly in average size in the eastern Asian part of the range body weight was similar or slightly lower at a mean of 1 5 kg 3 3 lb and 2 5 kg 5 5 lb for males and females from the Indian subcontinent respectively though the sample size is unknown in this case 24 30 nbsp Bonelli s eagles are medium sized eagles and have distinctly elongated legs and massive feet and talons Bonelli s eagles in general form appear to have a medium sized head on a fairly long neck a strong bill a mid to longish tail and exceptionally long and well feathered legs The combination of its well proportioned stout body and elongated legs may lend to descriptions of the species as athletic in appearance 6 31 This eagle often perches with a very upright carriage at times openly on a rock a crag tree branches or some form of post but also in the foliage of tree cover especially when actively hunting When perched the wing tips tend to fall a bit short of the tail tip 6 24 Among standard linear measurements the wing chord of males varies from 458 to 542 mm 18 0 to 21 3 in with an average in western Europe of 480 4 mm 18 91 in in tail length from 237 to 287 mm 9 3 to 11 3 in with an average of 268 1 mm 10 56 in in tarsus length from 93 to 120 mm 3 7 to 4 7 in with an average of 99 5 mm 3 92 in and in total bill length from 40 4 to 45 3 mm 1 59 to 1 78 in with an average of 43 3 mm 1 70 in Meanwhile females vary in wing chord from 478 to 560 mm 18 8 to 22 0 in in tail length from 246 to 319 mm 9 7 to 12 6 in with an average of 288 5 mm 11 36 in in tarsus length from 93 to 127 mm 3 7 to 5 0 in with an average of 119 1 mm 4 69 in and in total bill length from 41 3 to 51 8 mm 1 63 to 2 04 in with an average of 46 6 mm 1 83 in 6 26 24 32 Two males from the A f renschi race measured 444 and 452 mm 17 5 and 17 8 in in wing chord length and a single female measured 493 mm 19 4 in 6 Bonelli s eagle is intermediate in its wing lengths and tail length proportionately between the shorter tailed and longer winged eagles of open country and longer tailed and shorter winged forest eagles which allows to vary its hunting between short burst agile surprise attacks in trees and ample ground covering pursuits in the open 24 33 34 Its talons and feet are proportionately very large and presumably rather powerful for the eagle s size In particular the elongated talon on its rear toe used as a killing apparatus by almost all accipitrids or hallux claw is longer than that of the much larger eastern imperial eagle Aquila heliaca and proportionately slightly larger even than its bigger sympatric competitor the golden eagle 13 35 Hallux claw lengths in Bonelli s eagles from western Europe averaged 37 21 mm 1 465 in in males and in females averaged 43 1 mm 1 70 in and could farther range up to 47 mm 1 9 in 26 Colouring and identification edit nbsp Juvenile Bonelli s eagle in flight in rural Sangli district Adult are dark brown above from a cold hue similar to dark chocolate to an umber hue depending on their state of molt as well as to some extent individual and regional variances with pale margins to most feathers These pale margins are especially broad on the median wing coverts which thus appear lighter brown overall Adults also have a variably sized irregular white patch on the mantle that can vary from nearly absent though almost never completely so to being quite large and extending to the upper back The adult s tail is grey with obscure darker brown thin bars with a broad blackish subterminal band and creamy white tip The adult Bonelli s head is dark brown with a paler often streaky neck and a white throat The underside has a cream base colour with variable amounts of sparse blackish brown streaks or drop shaped markings 6 27 36 The adult female averages darker and more heavily patterned than the adult male particular on the underside a case of colour sexual dimorphism otherwise seemingly rare in booted eagles 13 26 The streaking on this eagle is normally strongest on the breast and upper flanks while the lower belly and crissum are typically either plain or only faintly marked Juveniles are a lighter medium brown above with variable paler edges sometimes with a creamy patch on the back not the mantle as in the adults and uppertail coverts 6 27 36 Generally juveniles have a rusty brown head with a darker brown around and behind their eyes The juvenile eagle s crown is either darkly streaked or occasionally plain greyish The tail of young birds is more clearly barred than the adults while the subterminal band is only negligibly thicker than the other bars Like adults the juvenile Bonelli s eagle s tail has a thin white tip The juvenile is light rufous to warm buff below with minimal black streaks which are normally confined to chest sides 6 27 37 38 By their 2nd summer the young eagles are still largely the same in colouring but tend to become more patchy below with increased heavy streaking During the gradual further development through subsequent molts the immature eagles develop a thicker subterminal band and a paler ground colour below Among the bare parts adult s eyes are yellow to yellow orange while those of the juvenile are hazel brown Adult plumage is obtained between the 4th and 5th years At all ages the cere and feet are both pale yellow 6 27 In flight Bonelli s eagle is a largish raptor with a well projecting head and broad long and somewhat square ended wings which are slightly pinched in at body with a little tapering at tips Feather molts can make the wings look quite variable in shape with some individuals appearing rather longer and narrower winged than others In flight the tail appears long and broad but if pinched in can appear surprisingly narrow 6 24 37 This species tends to fly with powerful but loose shallow beats When gliding they do so often on flat wings with well spread feathers and the carpals pressed slightly forward but more so when entering a fast glide This species soars infrequently on flat or slightly raised wings 39 At nearly all times of the year Bonelli s eagles quite often flies in pairs 24 In colouring the flying adult is dark above with a variable amount of the white marking on the mantle The tail has faded barring rarely perceptible on grey with a big blotchy subterminal band and a white tip above The markings on the tail look more or less the same when seen both from below and above Adult Bonelli s eagles have white lesser coverts which along with the greyish tail stand out in contrast against blackish central wing band over the greater and median coverts Also the flight feathers are faintly and thinly barred light grey brown with paler bases which often become paler to a whitish hue on the primaries inside blackish tips and leading wing coverts In flight juveniles are brown above with slightly darker wing ends and tips to greater coverts and greyer primary windows Occasionally juveniles manifest a creamy patch on back and obscure narrow U above barred tail which even if present are only sometimes visible Below the juvenile s wing linings are light rufous to warm buff like the body colour Usually juveniles appear with darker tips to greater coverts forming wing diagonals sometimes lacking or confined to carpal area and a small but distinct area of white on primaries against the blackish tips Until the 3rd year the young eagles appear more like a 1st year juvenile than an adult but begin developing more streaks below and darker greater underwing coverts By the 4th year the subadult Bonelli s are increasingly similar to the adult with an increasing subterminal band a whiter underbody and fairly prominent underwing diagonals However subadults are often still appear with a mix of paler barred juvenile type feathers and plainer darker adult feathers on the flight feathers 6 27 37 39 nbsp An adult Bonelli s eagle in flight shows its ample white mantle Bonelli s eagles are generally unmistakable when shape flight and plumage are considered in combination 6 In poor light it is possible to mistake one with a honey buzzard one mainly in Europe and another mainly in Asia as these raptors are extremely polymorphic and can come surprisingly close to approximating the plumage of various more powerful raptors The wing shape in Bonelli s eagles can at times appear similar to that of honey buzzard but the latter raptor type are usually distinctly slimmer and slighter bodied with a much smaller slimmer head In flight honey buzzards often have notched rather than square ended tails less emarginated primaries and typically they fly with their wings held more at an angle The sympatric species of honey buzzard tend to have bolder barring on the tail and underwings broader dark trailing wing edges and all have no pale mantle patch or darker underwing diagonals 6 24 37 An unlikely source of confusion is the northern goshawk Accipiter gentilis which is usually visibly smaller with much shorter wings a slightly longer tail different level flight style and many distinctive plumage characteristics Distant juvenile Bonelli s could conceivably be mistaken for the long legged buzzard Buteo rufinus but the buzzard is also smaller and is shorter tailed with prominent dark carpal patches and dark trailing wing edges Furthermore the buzzard usually holds its wings in a noticeable dihedral when flying in a soar 6 37 39 40 Another unlikely confusion species is the short toed eagle Circaetus gallicus which roughly matches the size of Bonelli s eagles but the short toed has larger and differently rather wedge shaped wings with a much less dark overall pattern as well as a shorter tail a rounder head on a shorter neck and usually a dark rather than light throat 37 39 Also goshawks short toed eagles and European honey buzzards usually frequent different habitats more often living in more wooded and lowland habitats 6 Bonelli s eagles may be mistaken for pale morph adult booted eagle Hieraeetus pennatus by inexperienced observers but beyond being a third larger and more than twice as heavy Bonelli s eagles are moreover distinct in plumage Overall Bonelli s are much darker and streaker especially compared to the clearly paler flight feathers of booted eagles Booted eagles are both whiter and more contrasting on the upperwing coverts have whitish uppertail coverts and have white on the wing s patagium More similar in plumage is the juvenile Bonelli s eagle are the rare rufous morph of the booted eagle but the latter can still be told by the booted species narrower wings and smaller size 24 39 In southern part of the Red Sea vagrants largely juveniles may possibly come into range of the closely related and more similar African hawk eagle but the latter is somewhat smaller and comparatively short winged and longer tailed the total length is similar between the species due to the African s longer tail but Bonelli s can be visibly larger bodied and rather heavier In the African species the adult plumage is a more contrasting with dark slate gray upperparts purer white underparts with dark streaking In African hawk eagles juveniles compared to Bonelli s are darker above with pale wing windows 6 41 Vocalizations edit source source Call of Bonelli s eagle Bonelli s eagle is largely silent outside of breeding season and is a somewhat infrequent vocalizer even in the context of breeding Its calls are less well studied than those of the African hawk eagle which although a tropical species also generally ceases to call outside of the breeding season 6 42 43 The main call of Bonelli s eagle is done during the courtship display and sometimes also at the nest Its main call consists of a loud shrill somewhat far carrying scream yuiii yuiii gii gii or a drawn oout heeeeii heeeeii with slight regional or even individual variations Its call is farther carrying than the puppy like one of the golden eagle and is reminiscent in pitch of that of the red tailed hawk Buteo jamaicensis 6 13 38 The call may be given by both sexes However the female Bonelli s eagle calls most intensely when the male is delivering prey unlike the preference for vocalizing in aerial display as the male usually does Other recorded vocalizations have included a fluted low pitched klu klu klu as well as a repeated ki ki ki in alarm Also other barking gurgling and grunting sounds have been reported by researchers at or near the nests 6 34 Range and habitat edit nbsp Typically rugged environment with mixed vegetation that Bonelli s eagle is often at home in Here in Andalusia s Sierra de las Nieves Bonelli s eagle have a spotty and sparse worldwide distribution currently The species is distributed in northwestern Africa from the Anti Atlas in Morocco northeasterly through the lower parts of the Atlas mountains in northern Algeria and northern Tunisia and probably formerly northern Libya 1 6 44 45 46 Beyond its African breeding range the IUCN and others have mapped out a semi regular wintering range for Bonelli s eagles in coastal west Africa from southern Morocco down through Western Sahara Mauritania and northwestern Senegal rarely also east to Mali although little more is reportedly known about this population and its origins and altogether the species is considered largely non migratory 1 47 48 49 Additionally the species has been recorded as a vagrant in east Africa in Somalia as well 50 In southern Europe they range patchily through different parts of Portugal and Spain into southern France as far north as the department of Drome 1 51 Discontinuously they are now seemingly solely left as breeding bird in Italy on the islands of Sardinia and Sicily 9 52 In southeastern Europe an isolated population possibly persists in Croatia as well as in northern and southern Macedonia with the further possibility of spilling over into Kosovo and spottily through different areas of Greece possibly spilling over the borders in the west in Albania and in the east in Bulgaria as well as Crete 1 53 54 55 56 Out of Europe they may be found in western and southern Turkey Syria possibly but most likely extirpated the isle of Cyprus Lebanon Israel western Jordan northeastern Egypt rarely in northern half of Sinai Peninsula possibly but not certainly in spots in the west and south of Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Arabian Peninsula to Yemen Oman and the United Arab Emirates 1 6 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Elsewhere in the Middle East their range includes eastern Iraq and west south and northeastern Iran extending somewhat into Turkmenistan in the Kopet Dag range 1 6 65 66 Further east into Asia their distribution includes eastern Afghanistan and Pakistan through most of the Indian subcontinent where generally it is uncommon but more locally common near Nepal On the other hand they are absent in eastern India and only occurring as a vagrant to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh 1 6 24 In India they are most regularly occur in certain area such as Chambal ravines Ranthambore National Park Chir zone of lower Kumaun Himalayas and in winter in the Keoladeo National Park of Bharatpur Rajasthan 24 From central Myanmar they range across into northwestern Thailand and northern Laos though possibly only as a visitor rather than breeding in the latter two In southern China their resident range includes Yunnan Guangxi and Guangdong north to Yangtze river as well as rarely into Hong Kong 1 6 67 68 69 70 Their isolated Indonesian population ranges is in the Lesser Sunda Islands including at least Sumbawa Timor Wetar Luang and Flores however records show they ve turned up on as many as 20 islands in the Lesser Sundas 6 23 71 Bonelli s eagles are mostly residential throughout their range but juvenile can disperse up to over several hundred kilometers Sometimes they are recorded at migration sites and at spots where not known to breed in winter 72 73 Wanderings include around 700 km 430 mi north of their regular range in France near the coast of English Channel far from their normal haunts in Regensburg Germany and probably both from the Italian island populations to northwestern Italy and Slovenia 6 74 75 76 From their Iberian peninsula range presumably vagrants have been reported in the Canary islands 77 Beyond Sri Lanka other areas the species has been known to vagrate or perhaps rarely winter in Asia have included Kazakhstan the Korean peninsula Malaysia and Cochinchina in Vietnam as well as a record in winter 1996 on the isle of Yamdena the latter presumably from the Lesser Sunda population 6 23 78 79 80 81 Habitat edit Bonelli s eagles across their wide range tend to dwell in similar habitat types They are mostly distributed in lands hugging large bodies of water largely the Mediterranean Sea and northern Indian ocean Also to a lesser extent they may live near the coast of the Atlantic and the Pacific as well as near the Caspian sea inland Despite often being near seas and oceans they mostly occur in fairly arid habitats and in quite sunny areas In some parts of Asia though semi moist habitats may be resided in Bonelli s eagles prefer rocky areas including lower mountains and foothills with plentiful cliffs as well as steep sided river valleys and gorges This species is very skilled at hunting in craggy irregular rocky terrain 6 24 82 Usually extensive garrigue type habitat such as low bushes or more substantial vegetation such as scattered trees are a common feature of residential ranges but also at times even denser woodlands Such scrubby areas are key since they generally hold prey concentration in Mediterranean habitats 6 83 84 However excessive ground cover may limit hunting success so scrub is avoided when it becomes too dense 83 85 In the Mediterranean region forests visited by Bonelli s eagles are usually either pine forests or sclerophyll forests Deep forests are generally avoided however 84 86 Although Carrascal amp Seoane 2009 claimed that agricultural areas are generally avoided per their analysis in Spain Martinez Miranzo et al 2016 indicated that the species was showing a growing preference for agricultural arable land and other human modified habitats probably as prey selection has shifted more heavily to pigeons out of necessity 83 85 A similar growing preference for arables was also detected in Sicily as well 86 However urban areas are generally strongly avoided both as breeding and as foraging areas by this species 84 Bonelli s eagles may additionally range into timbered plains or even virtually barren slopes or semi desert especially in areas such as Israel and India where moister valleys intersect with deserts 6 24 84 87 Juveniles may take up temporary residence over dry cultivation small wetland areas coastlines or surprisingly deep woodlands 6 24 83 84 In winter these eagles may occur at times at lower elevation levels and more open habitats in semi deserts and plains where they can appear surprisingly at home but often prefer wetter habitats such as large river mouths marshlands and lakes especially where these fall in existing home range as prey is more likely to be concentrated in such areas 6 24 83 In some areas such as southeastern Asia some of the Indian subcontinent and in the Lesser Sundas Bonelli s eagles may reside around tropical rainforest that is much wetter and more humid than their typical habitats and in such areas are attracted to more sparse and rocky areas such as slopes and cliffs as well as alternately open mosaics and glades 6 24 Usually Bonelli s eagles live at an elevation of 1 500 m 4 900 ft or lower in Europe to 2 000 m 6 600 ft in their African Atlas mountain homes and to as high an elevation 3 000 m 9 800 ft in Asia and even 3 750 m 12 300 ft in residence in Bhutan The main elevation where the species resides in the Himalayas falls between 1 200 and 2 000 m 3 900 and 6 600 ft 6 88 Behaviour and dietary ecology edit nbsp Pair of Bonelli s eagle at RaigadThis species is very aerial often given to soaring and circling over its home range Like most raptorial birds it mainly lives solitarily or in a breeding pair 6 24 Bonelli s eagle is a powerful predator and has been described as rather bold and rapacious 13 34 Its primary hunting methods recall those of a powerful Accipiter such as a goshawk Most commonly this eagle still hunts often either utilizing a concealed tree perch or a lofty spot in irregular rocky terrain to watch for prey activity Upon spotting its quarry it often dashes out rapidly to take birds as they take off or a mammal as it runs for cover at times making lengthy tail chase that may continue between trees or into tree stands or bushes Not infrequently as a latter part of a tail chase these eagles again reminiscent of a goshawk will occasionally walk on the ground to obtain their prey 6 33 89 Bonelli s eagles also hunt in a quartering flying style relatively close to the ground in a fashion reminiscent of a harrier or patrols hillsides for prey activity 6 89 Bonelli s eagles will also occasionally stoop from a soaring height onto prey Mostly this predator takes birds from on or near the ground but some snatched them from bushes and seldom water It has been known to have sufficient agility to catch some birds from active flight 6 33 89 In one case a Bonelli s eagle was observed to fly below a jackdaw and swoop upwards to grab it from below 89 Tandem hunting by a lifelong pair is quite common almost exceptionally so in this species One eagle tends to fly directly above the other with several cases of one eagle scattering a bird flock for the other eagle to quickly single out in a similar style to tandem hunting laggar falcons Falco jugger However per Spanish studies apparently tandem hunting neither improved hunting success nor were the eagles able to capture larger prey in fact the estimated prey size by pairs was slightly lower than that taken by each mate hunting by itself while hunting in tandem It was hypothesized that tandem hunting is more important to the socio sexual relations of the pair rather than capture of a significant amount of prey 6 24 90 91 Compared to most other booted eagles Bonelli s eagle takes a great majority of its prey alive and seldom comes to carrion or pirates foods from other raptors 13 34 However it will readily come to previously injured prey especially water birds shot by duck hunters and will readily take young animals across most prey classes 24 Also in Keoladeo National Park India Bonelli s eagles were observed to habitually follow harriers spotted eagles and other Aquila eagles in order to capture water birds incidentally flushed during their flybys 24 92 nbsp A Bonelli s eagle that has caught a rock pigeon one of the favored prey species Overall Bonelli s eagles take a fairly wide variety of prey Across its wide range their prey spectrum has been known to include perhaps up to nearly 200 prey species Dietary studies have primarily been conducted in western Europe though some study has gone into their food habits elsewhere being well known in Cyprus and less so India 8 24 93 Brown amp Amadon 1986 considered Bonelli s eagles prey size range as nearly as extensive as the most massive booted eagles such as the golden eagle and the martial eagle Polemaetus bellicosus but mainly may have been describing the African hawk eagle that was lumped at the time 13 Bonelli s eagles mainly hunts birds and mammals taking reptiles and other prey types on a more local and sporadic basis In western Europe it is considered something of a specialist predator on rabbits and partridges though other birds such as pigeons gulls and corvids sometimes are taken as much or more so depending on local prey population trends 8 Pellet analysis is considered the most reliable way to get a complete picture of Bonelli s eagle dietary habits 94 Despite its predaceous power typically the average size of prey taken are within average range for a raptorial bird and it may take smaller prey on average than its mildly smaller cousin the African hawk eagle 6 43 In Sierra Morena Spain the mean size of prey taken was estimated at 630 g 1 39 lb while in Greece the mean prey size was estimated at 877 g 1 933 lb 95 96 A subsequent study in Spain however posited the mean prey size as lower than in the past stating that prey taken by males averaged an estimated 416 g 14 7 oz and by females at 459 g 1 012 lb probably due to increased importance of pigeons and reduced numbers of rabbits 91 Thus on average prey sizes average about 20 45 of Bonelli s eagles own weight 91 95 96 97 Furthermore the latter Spanish study found hunting success of Bonelli s eagles to average around 28 5 a slightly higher hunting success rate than golden eagles 20 or lesser spotted eagles Clanga pomarina 24 but slightly lower than greater spotted eagles Clanga clanga 34 91 Rabbits and other lagomorphs edit nbsp European rabbits are strongly favored prey for Bonelli s eagles in western Europe More than any other the European rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus is considered the most important prey species for most European Bonelli s eagles 8 In the largest European studies the rabbit is usually the leading prey species such as in Catalonia Spain where rabbits comprised 22 54 of 2254 prey items and 33 3 of the prey biomass and in Provence France where rabbits made up 16 4 of 2742 prey items 98 99 In the third largest western European study rabbits were secondary in number to pigeons at 18 4 of 1641 prey items but were still the largest contributors of biomass at 33 2 100 Even where non native such as the Aegean islands of Greece the European rabbit dominated the foods of this eagle comprising 40 8 by number and 46 6 by biomass of the foods 96 In Spain it was found that about three quarters of studied floating juvenile Bonelli s eagles were hunting rabbits almost exclusively apparently as they were easier to capture despite their larger size than bird prey 101 Research determines that Bonelli s eagle are often attracted to scrub areas during hunting forays to catch sight of rabbits foraying out of vegetative cover Since young juvenile and yearling rabbits are forced out to more open feeding spots by dominant adult rabbits they are disproportionately often selected by Bonelli s eagles and other avian predators Rabbits become more commonly caught during the summer when the young rabbits tend to disperse 91 8 102 On the contrary 86 2 of the rabbits taken in southwest Portugal were reportedly adults 100 Most rabbits caught by Bonelli s eagle were estimated to weigh between 500 and 1 500 g 1 1 and 3 3 lb from the size of a kit to a smallish adult per Spanish studies with an estimated average weight in Spain of 857 g 1 889 lb 8 98 A study in southeastern Spain estimated that the region s Bonelli s eagles claim about 337 rabbits during the breeding season and 237 rabbits during non breeding during the course of a year so despite their heavy predation barely make a dent on the overall population of rabbits effecting less than 2 5 of the population at peak 103 The native western European population of wild rabbit has been heavily depleted by myxomatosis and rabbit haemorrhagic disease having been reduced by an estimated 50 70 While the overall numbers seemingly taken by them reduced by as much as a third between 1968 and 2009 on evidence Bonelli s eagle still sought them out and hunted rabbits preferentially even during the non breeding season when their numbers dip to their lowest 103 104 In additional significant numbers of other lagomorphs may be taken extending to occasional Granada hares Lepus granatensis as well as accounts of Bonelli s eagles hunting European hares Lepus europaeus in the Greek isles and Indian hares Lepus nigricollis in the lower Himalayas 24 105 106 Gamebirds and pigeons edit nbsp Bonelli s eagle with a freshly caught grey junglefowl Gamebirds such as junglefowl are favored in the diet whenever available The main secondary wild prey species associated with Bonelli s eagles is the red legged partridge Alectoris rufa Although at times capable of evading the attentions of eagles this partridge occurs in conveys in the same mixed scrub that hold rabbits and is taken whenever the eagles are lucky enough to have the element of surprise About 383 red legged partridges were estimated to be hunted annually in one study area of southwestern Spain 91 8 103 In the large Spanish study of Catalonia French study of Provence and in southwest Portugal the red legged partridge made up 9 57 11 6 and 17 2 of the diet by number respectively 98 99 100 More so than any other prey type outside of western Europe gamebirds such as partridges seem to be globally the most favored prey type where available for Bonelli s eagle In Cyprus a review of 528 prey items revealed that the chukar Alectoris chukar was the main prey at 31 4 of the diet 93 More than a dozen gamebirds have been detected in the foods of this species from Asia with at least a half dozen genera turning up in a few reviews of their ecology in India 6 24 107 At times even adult Indian peafowl Pavo cristatus potentially weighing up to 6 kg 13 lb have been dispatched by this species 24 In the Lesser Sunda Islands most eye witness accounts of their hunting habits indicate that wild or on some islands introduced green junglefowl Gallus varius as well as village chickens Gallus gallus are likely to be the most important prey 23 Beyond gamebirds pigeons are the other most significant avian prey type The two larger European pigeons the oft feral or domestic rock pigeon Columba livia and the common wood pigeon Columba palumbus are almost solely favored among this group where encountered In southwest Portugal pigeons have surpassed rabbits due to their disease based decline to become the most important prey Here attempts were made to parse the proportion of feral pigeons that were taken against the number of domestic pigeons since pigeon fanciers frequently persecute this eagle due its allegedly heavily predation of domestic birds Of the 1497 prey items overall feral pigeons were found to comprise 30 1 of the food by number and 26 of the biomass while the domestic types made up only 9 7 of the diet by number and 7 2 of the biomass 100 In Catalonia Spain unidentified pigeons made up 17 8 of the foods and 17 4 of the biomass while identified common wood pigeons made up a further 6 24 of the number and 6 54 of the biomass while a smaller study from the same area boosted wood pigeons to make up 11 3 of 524 prey items 98 108 In Cyprus rock and common wood pigeons collectively made up 27 7 of the diet 93 Other birds edit nbsp A Bonelli s eagle being mobbed by house crows in Pakistan as the eagle is a common predator of corvids Other medium sized birds are taken widely by Bonelli s eagles A surprisingly popular dietary choice in western Europe was for yellow legged gulls Larus michahellis weighing an estimated 1 119 g 2 467 lb In the 2724 prey items in Provence France this gull was second only to the rabbit in number comprising 14 6 of the diet 98 99 Other gulls are readily taken by Bonelli s eagles as well as wide diversity of other water birds including rails stone curlews lapwings sandpipers tubenoses cormorants and herons 8 98 99 100 109 110 Water birds taken Bonelli s eagles may vary in size from wading birds as small as 48 g 1 7 oz common sandpiper Acitis hypoleucos and diving birds as small as 174 g 6 1 oz little grebes Tachybaptus ruficollis to those as large as adults of 3 18 kg 7 0 lb painted storks Ciconia leucocephala 3 31 kg 7 3 lb greylag goose Anser anser though reportedly taken while injured by buckshot in India and 5 5 kg 12 lb common crane Grus grus 24 25 100 111 112 Corvids of a dozen or more species and up to the size of the 1 1 kg 2 4 lb common raven Corvus corax are taken in considerable numbers in differing parts of the range 8 24 100 In Provence France Eurasian magpie Pica pica and western jackdaw Corvus monedula made up 10 17 and 9 95 of the diet respectively 99 In Portugal Eurasian jay comprised 7 5 by number but only 2 7 of the biomass 100 Corvids were the leading prey for Bonelli s eagles in Georgia with the Eurasian magpie comprising 12 3 of the diet though largely young were reportedly taken and carrion crows Corvus corone making up a further 10 76 113 In the Aegeans of Greece carrion crows comprised 14 1 of the prey by number and 8 8 of the biomass while south of Turkey in Cyprus western jackdaw comprised 7 6 of the foods 93 96 Other assorted avian prey groups taken in usually smaller numbers include cuckoos swifts bustards nightjars bee eaters rollers hoopoes woodpeckers and parrots 24 8 98 100 109 113 114 115 Among passerines which are usually quite secondary besides corvids they ve been known to hunt various larks up to nearly 11 of the diet in Georgia shrikes swallows accentors Old World flycatchers at least 10 different species thrushes pipits starlings buntings finches and Old world sparrows 8 24 86 98 99 96 100 109 111 113 116 117 118 In total some 130 bird species may be taken and birds as a whole almost always form the most ample part of the diet compared to other classes 69 5 and 80 97 of the biomass in the south of France 67 7 in Georgia and 62 6 in Catalonia Spain 8 98 99 108 109 113 Other assorted prey edit Beyond the high significance of rabbits and sometimes other lagomorphs other mammals are rarely as important or diverse in the diet of Bonelli s eagles as birds are A couple of rodents can be locally significant secondary prey however The red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris with a mean estimated mass in Spain of 241 g 8 5 oz was reported in almost all western Europe studies with about 130 reported as taken in studies from Provence France 98 99 The black rat Rattus rattus of similar size to the squirrel at an average of about 200 g 7 1 oz was an important secondary food source in islands south and east of Greece being the second most common prey species in Cyprus 15 5 of 528 prey items and fifth most important prey species in the Aegean islands 93 96 In northwestern Africa such as Morocco it was reported that the fat sand rat Psammomys obesus another rodent of similar size was amongst the favorite foods locally for Bonelli s eagles 119 Other rodent species known in the diet of Bonelli s eagles have included other squirrels gundis assorted mice voles dormice and blind mole rats 8 99 120 121 122 123 Beyond a few species of hedgehogs additional mammalian prey for this species although seldom taken can be relatively large They ve been known to attack the young of various ungulates include blackbuck Antilope cervicapra chinkara Gazella bennettii domestic goats Capra aegagrus hircus and domestic sheep Ovis aries 24 8 124 In the Aegean islands live caught but often young and small goat kids comprised 8 5 of the foods and 24 3 of the biomass at nests 96 Among carnivorans Bonelli s eagles have reportedly attacked red fox Vulpes vulpes and wildcats Felis silvestris probably mostly kits and kittens of these two species in western Europe as well as stone martens Martes foina and assorted weasels Meanwhile adult Bengal fox Vulpes bengalensis have reportedly been caught in India 6 8 24 125 In France and Spain mammals overall comprised 34 8 and 26 1 of the diet respectively whereas in Georgia they made up 15 4 of the diet 99 108 109 113 Reptiles are usually secondary prey throughout the range Though they are known to hunt snakes Bonelli s eagles rarely hunt them and generally seem to pursue lizards by preference In Cyprus starred agamas Laudakia stellio comprised 5 9 of the food unidentified Lacerta lizards 10 76 of diet in Georgia and reptiles altogether adding up to 16 9 of the food by number Relatively large adult specimens of ocellated lizard Timon lepidus at 228 g 8 0 oz in mean body mass made up 3 97 of the biomass and 7 05 by number in Catalonia Spain 98 93 113 Desert monitor Varanus griseus and probably assorted other monitor lizards were reportedly amongst the leading prey for Bonelli s eagles in several parts of India 24 107 117 Minor prey includes toads and possibly a few other types of amphibian Potentially insects and or other invertebrates may be taken but these may incidentally consumed i e undigested food from the stomachs of prey 99 120 Interspecies predatory relationships edit nbsp While other birds of prey present some competition for Bonelli s eagles intraspecific conflicts are the most significant Here an adult escorts out a wandering juvenile from its range Bonelli s eagles frequently occur in range with multiple other eagles and competing predators Almost certainly the most direct competitor from their European range to the Middle East is their much larger cousin the golden eagle Habitat preferences overlap between these two eagles with both species favoring rocky habitats though the golden eagle regularly dwells at slightly higher elevations with alpine meadows though is as adaptive to low elevations as Bonelli s so long as habitat is favorable and undisturbed 21 95 Competition between the eagles has been reported in particular from Spain in areas such as Sierra Morena Both species excluded each other from mutual territories and had broadly overlapping food habits However Bonelli s eagle took more birds and golden eagle more singularly hunted rabbits Mean distance between nests on a plot of 2 200 km2 850 sq mi was found to be 10 2 km 6 3 mi for 8 pairs of golden eagles and 11 4 km 7 1 mi for 10 pairs of Bonelli s The two can co exist with sufficiently large ranges as long as they are able to maintain their own range with the existence of trophic segregation by size and the more avian based diet of Bonelli s and the lag in the breeding periods as these natural mechanisms would allow the coexistence of both species in the mountain 95 126 Cases of golden eagles taking over prior Bonelli s eagles territories have been reported but usually golden eagles only takes up the prior Bonelli s territory when the latter vanishes due to unrelated often anthropogenic causes not direct competition or usurpation A minor negative effect has been probably correlated with golden eagles not infrequently attacking and displacing juvenile and subadult Bonelli s eagles and can tend to be behaviorally dominant in keeping with its larger size This in turn presumably hampers the ability of Bonelli s to expand their range after declines and stabilize their population 127 128 129 130 131 Further east in Israel Bonelli s and golden eagles are competitors as well In the dry barren Negev desert golden eagles nests were found 13 1 km 8 1 mi apart and Bonelli s were scarce In the Judean desert which has more annual rainfall and more available prey the distance between golden eagle nests averaged 16 km 9 9 mi and Bonelli s eagle easily outnumbered them Apparently Bonelli s eagle exceptionally outcompeted its larger cousin here due to a subtle topographic variation in the habitat 87 In Spain Bonelli s eagles share cliff habitats beyond golden eagles also with peregrine falcons Falco peregrinus common ravens Eurasian eagle owls Bubo bubo and three species of vulture The eagles tend to dominate the smaller carnivorous birds in most circumstances even the swifter peregrine 132 However the still larger griffon vulture Gyps fulvus was apparently a routine territory and nest usurper of other birds of prey displacing golden eagles bearded vultures Gypaetus barbatus and Egyptian vultures Neophron percnopterus from their nests as well as 9 out of 23 eyries built by Bonelli s eagles in the study area 133 Despite their prior claimed dominance over the swift falcons at least three cases have been observed of peregrine falcons usurping Bonelli s eagle presumably through routine harassment and dive bombing nests in Spain 134 Beyond golden eagles peregrines and griffon vultures tawny owls Strix alucco have been known to take over old Bonelli s eagle nests 135 European rabbits have a huge range of predators in the Iberian peninsula with at least 30 different species known to hunt the once densely populated lagomorph 8 103 102 Besides the overlapping ranges of Bonelli s and golden eagles most other birds of prey that hunt rabbits extensively are partitioned from the potential depletive effect of competition by differences in habitat preferences hunting techniques and temporal activity Beyond the specialized mammalian predator the Iberian lynx Lynx pardinus some of the other most specialized predators of wild rabbits are Bonelli s eagles golden eagles Spanish imperial eagles Aquila adalberti and Eurasian eagle owls 8 103 102 136 137 138 A comparative study indicated that the golden eagle diet was comprised 40 by rabbits while they made up 49 for eagle owls 50 for Spanish imperial eagles and 61 for Bonelli s eagle 139 Elsewhere higher import has been applied for rabbits in the local diet of golden eagles as well as for Spanish imperial eagles 95 140 The mean size of rabbits taken increases more or less with the size of the avian predator 662 g 1 459 lb for northern goshawks 857 g 1 889 lb for Bonelli s eagles 1 000 g 2 2 lb for Eurasian eagle owls and 1 360 g 3 00 lb for golden eagles 21 95 141 142 Along with northern goshawks golden eagles and Eurasian eagle owls Bonelli s eagle is considered a super predator in the European region due to its habit of hunting other predators In contrast to the other birds of prey they are somewhat less commonly at high predator status compared to goshawks most common predator of other diurnal raptors in studies golden eagles most common predator of mesopredator mammals and eagle owl most common predator of other owls 143 However they are relatively common predators of other diurnal birds of prey per overall analysis they took such prey somewhat more regularly than did golden eagles in Europe 143 144 Among the other accipitrids that Bonelli s eagle have been known to hunt include the Indian spotted eagle Clanga hastata European honey buzzard Pernis apivorus red kite Milvus milvus black kite Milvus migrans western marsh harrier Circus aeruginosus Montagu s harrier Circus pygargus hen harrier Circus cyaenus Eurasian sparrowhawk Accipiter nisus shikra Accipiter badius northern goshawk long legged buzzard and common buzzard Buteo buteo 8 24 13 108 109 116 145 Among falcons they ve been known to prey upon common kestrel Falco tinnunculus lesser kestrel Falco naumanni and peregrine falcon and as for owls tawny owl Strix alucco little owl Athene noctua long eared owl Asio otus short eared owl Asio flammeus and most impressively of all in at least one instance an adult Eurasian eagle owl 8 24 86 98 109 146 Although usually classed as an apex predator as in most cases of apex predators in competitive environments Bonelli s eagles sometimes infrequently fall victim to interspecific killings and predation as well 147 Eurasian eagle owls have been known to prey on Bonelli s nestlings a few times and possibly also an adult at least once 148 149 In one case a subadult male golden eagle preyed upon an adult male Bonelli s eagle 150 Stone martens are also counted amongst the predators of nests exclusively as egg thieves in Spain 151 Breeding edit nbsp mating on the Southern bank of the Chambal River Uttar Pradesh India Pair formation and nest distribution edit Bonelli s eagles like most but not all raptorial birds generally lives solitarily or in pairs They usually mate for life 152 Territories are maintained through aerial displays which often involve calling single or mutual high circling and most frequently sky dancing in the area of eyrie During this species sky dances one or other of the eagle pair plunges headlong from a great height with its wings almost closed before checking and rising again on stiff wings circling to regain original altitude and diving again The sky dance sequence may be repeated up to 5 10 times Occasionally but usually infrequently territorial exclusions escalate into talon grappling between a territorial bird and an intruder 6 153 Aerial display extend with diminished frequency into the incubation and early nestling periods 24 In Spain the average estimated size of a pairs home range was a very large 44 2 km2 17 1 sq mi though only 27 3 of their home ranges on average were used in all seasons 154 155 Home ranges in Portugal were estimated to average up to 130 km2 50 sq mi 156 On Cyprus the mean nearest neighbor distance was 7 4 km 4 6 mi with 0 52 0 65 pairs per 100 km2 39 sq mi 58 Contrary to many other raptor species it was found that were no significant relationship between the density of their main prey species and the distance of the neighbouring pairs 157 A dead or missing mate may be quickly replaced and mature adults have additionally been seen breeding with subadults 24 nbsp Paired Bonelli s eaglesNests edit nbsp A Bonelli s eagle s egg from the collection Museum Wiesbaden nbsp Aquila fasciata MHNTThe breeding season of Bonelli s eagles is from late January February to July in the western part of the range and November August September peaking December May in the Indian subcontinent and Myanmar Both members of the pair may dwell around the eyrie for up to 2 3 months before breeding Their nest is a huge structure of branches and sticks scarcely smaller than those built by eagles twice the size of this species though rarely as great in depth as some old nests of the larger eagles Often the nest completely obscures the sitting female from view unless it is seen at the same level or higher than the nest Nest size can average up to 1 8 m 5 ft 11 in across and 60 cm 24 in deep but with repeated use the nest can range up to 2 m 6 ft 7 in in both directions record sized nest in India was 2 4 m 7 ft 10 in in height Tree nests tend to average larger than those placed on cliff ledges 6 24 13 One nest in the Gir forest was used periodically used over the course of 30 years 24 While they may line their active nest with greenery it is less frequent and sparser where present than in many other birds of prey 6 Nesting locales are often high on cliff ledge or alternatively at 5 to 40 m 16 to 131 ft usually over 10 m 33 ft above the ground in large trees 6 Very rarely nests may too be on the perimeter of buildings 158 The trees selected are often the tallest and or most densely foliaged in a given stand 6 13 Their close cousin the African hawk eagle usually nests on trees and rarely utilizes crags and alternate nesting sites as does Bonelli s 13 Historically throughout their range in western Europe Bonelli s eagles were considered almost obligate cliff nesters on almost any rocky environment from precipitous mountain ranges canyons over river valleys even down to low rocky rubble to sea cliffs 159 However up to 52 tree nests for the species have now been recorded in southwest Portugal Often the Portuguese nesting eagles used invasive Tasmanian blue gum Eucalyptus globulus 44 2 of the time while a further 21 2 were on cork oak Quercus suber not to mention some that were placed on large shrubs i e strawberry trees Arbutus unedo The mean height of Portuguese tree nest was 23 9 m 78 ft The Portuguese study further found 67 3 of the tree nests to be on hill slopes and 4 5 m 15 ft average height for lowest branch both presumably as anti predator measure 156 By 2017 the expansion to using tree nests had bolstered the southwest Portugal population considerably 160 In the 1990s the first ever tree nest was found in the relative Bonelli s eagle stronghold of Catalonia Spain while another singular tree nest was also found in the south of France 161 162 In India Bonelli s eagles seem to readily switch between tree and cliff nests The eagles of areas such as Maharashtra and the Western Ghats are usually partial to nesting in trees while in the Deccan Peninsula Indo Gangetic plain and Himalayan foothills the eagles alternated between nesting on cliffs and lofty trees including red silk cotton Bombax ceiba sacred fig Ficus religiosa Javan plum Syzygium cumini or Dalbergia ssp Bonelli s eagles in India may also nest close to human habitations if disturbance is low such as in Saurashtra and in Himalayan foothills in the latter often in large chir pine Pinus roxburghii near villages In Pakistan the species has been known to use seaside cliffs Also in the Indian desert zone Bonelli s eagles are known to use relatively low rocky hills with shallow gradients making the nest ledges relatively easy to access 24 163 On Cyprus 70 of nests were in Turkish pines Pinus brutia at a mean elevation of 625 m 2 051 ft 58 Often this eagle uses the same nest in successive years but also alternate nest may be used Often somewhere between 1 and 5 nests may be built by the species on their home range Like other birds of prey the presence of alternate nest may be a strategy to cope with ectoparasitic infestations within the nest 13 134 The construction of a new nest takes roughly a month s time 13 Development of young edit The clutch size is usually 2 though one egg is not infrequently laid This species seldom lays three eggs though there are now a few records of this and even three large eaglets recorded in a nest 164 165 Their eggs are largely white but are often sparingly spotted and streaked with brown In a sample of 120 egg height was measured as 62 to 76 5 mm 2 44 to 3 01 in with an average of 69 mm 2 7 in by 48 to 57 3 mm 1 89 to 2 26 in in diameter with an average of 54 mm 2 1 in 13 Egg laying dates peak from February to April in France January in North Africa while in India the peak may be December to April sometimes even into May as in the Himalayas 6 24 13 Incubation lasts for 37 to 41 days in Europe but is estimated at a more prolonged 40 45 days in the more tropical Indian subcontinent 6 24 Incubation is mainly done by the female about 90 of the time while males mainly capture food 13 Upon hatching the eaglets are altricial initially The first feathers start appearing through the white down at 25 35 days and practically cover the body by 45 days By the latter stage the eaglets can normally feed themselves but may be variable in learning ability Fledgling period is at 56 to 65 days of age rarely as late as 70 days 6 24 The average age at fledging in Spain was estimated at 63 days 166 Female broods about 90 of the time for first two weeks after first hatching but this decreases to 50 by the end of those weeks The female attacks potential predators that come near the nest including other raptors In the Indian subcontinent they ve been seen to escort oriental honey buzzards crested serpent eagles Spilornis cheela bearded vultures as well as Gyps vultures conspecifics and corvids away from the eyrie vicinity while the presence of northern plains gray langurs Semnopithecus entellus was observed to provoke a fierce defensive attack However unlike African hawk eagles Bonelli s eagles rarely attack humans at the nest 6 24 Males at times have been observed to take a share of the brooding and rarely even feeding the eaglet s 13 Caches of food are often stored early on but are quickly depleted and rarely still present latter in the nesting period when the eaglets growth accelerates 24 167 The female lingers near nest even after brooding stage However the female also tends to take part in prey capture relatively early in fledging period compared to many other eagles 13 In the latter third of the post fledging period the parents are rarely in attendance except when bringing food The dependence of the young eagles may extend for about 8 to 11 weeks but has individually varied from 50 to over 120 days Research on conditions and habitat composition has indicated variation in the post fledgling dependence stage is derived from habitat quality or from parental skill However fledgling body condition seemed to play no major role in this stage On evidence the young eagles drift from their parents care independently 6 13 168 169 170 166 nbsp Fully fledged juvenile eagles lingering in the vicinity of their nest Post breeding edit One of the most significant portions of Bonelli s eagles lifecycle is the dispersal stage The dispersal and post dispersal stage has been studied at length in western Europe with a surprising amount of individual variation being found Here dispersal occurred at an average age of 142 days occasionally up to 163 days old with a varying distance of dispersal from nest to settlement area were from 50 to 536 km 31 to 333 mi The average distance of dispersal in France was 158 km 98 mi Anywhere from 58 of 47 to 87 of 7 juveniles survived per these radio tagged studies 171 172 173 The high distance dispersal of the juvenile Bonelli s eagles may potentially benefit gene flow 174 175 176 At least 20 communal roosts for post dispersal juvenile Bonelli s eagles were found in Spain Each were found to house between 2 and 11 eagles of the species with mean of 5 1 It was also found the juveniles were usually sharing many of the roosts with Spanish imperial eagle juveniles as well in 91 4 of roost though each species clustered separately in different parts of the trees or bushes More infrequently assorted other species of raptor would join the juvenile eagle roosts at dusk 177 Breeding success and causes of failures edit nbsp Bonelli s eagle feeding its eaglet with a partridge The breeding success of Bonelli s eagles may vary considerably Mean fledgling success on Cyprus was found to be 1 44 per pair 58 In Sicily breeding success was found to vary 0 67 in the 1990s to 1 37 in the 2000s after some protection and productivity of successful pairs was from 1 42 2000s to 1 51 1990s 178 179 Of 1506 breeding attempts in western Europe 65 7 were successful Of these successful ones 39 8 produced one fledgling 59 7 produced two and only 0 5 produced three fledglings 180 181 182 Like many birds of prey siblicide or cainism has occurred wherein the eldest nestling repeatedly attacks often killing and occasionally eating their younger siblings In about 20 of nest the second chick survives therefore this species is classed as a facultative cainist rather than an obligate one On evidence egg laying and hatching may grow more asynchronous when frequently interrelated outside stressors such as food supply habitat disturbance and poor weather are applied all of which may increase the likelihood of cainism 13 180 183 Whether the young have died by siblicide or via other means Bonelli s eagles have been known to consume their own dead nestlings on a couple of occasions 184 On evidence the younger eaglets of Bonelli s eagles and other species in areas where threatened may too survive by human intervention wherein they remove the chicks and either raise them in semi captivity or introduce them to a new set of parents 185 In India habitat and the resulting prey composition were found to be the most significant drivers of breeding success In protected areas such as Ranthambore National Park nest often produce two fledglings while in degraded areas such as the Kumaun division they often produce just one Fledgling number here was thought to be driven primarily by prey carrying capacity of a given area 24 When an almost fledged young was stolen by village children in India 15 hours later researchers introduced another which was accepted by parents In a similar case another Indian pair rejected its own nearly fledged eaglet after it had been stolen however with repeated attempts was accepted and successfully fledged 186 When poachers stole some eagles in Spain a couple of pairs were found to successfully lay replacement clutches each with the typical 2 eggs some 25 30 days later 187 188 A western European review of 1052 breeding attempts indicated a negative correlation with colder temperatures and heavier rains during nesting Therefore in more temperate areas such as northern Spain the average breeding success was lower and the young often dispersed southwards due to the cooler climate 189 190 Conservation and rehabilitation edit nbsp Artwork from a 19th century German Natural History bookBonelli s eagles have sharply declined at least locally inexorably and drastically in much of their range In the 1990s it was estimated that the entire west Palearctic held about 2000 3000 pairs with the Iberian peninsula 750 845 pairs and northwestern Africa 1000 or so being the core areas In the mid 1990s it was indicated that there were 938 1039 pairs in all of Europe about 75 80 of which in Spain with an estimated 75 90 in Portugal 35 45 in Greece 29 in France 15 20 in Italy and a handful each in Croatia and Albania 6 By the 2000s with some continued declines and minor local recoveries as well as more comprehensive surveying resulted in an estimate of 1500 pairs in Europe still far less than historic numbers at least a 30 reduction since the 1950s and qualifying the species for local critically endangered status Local extinction is probable in many if not all populations yet there is no overarching action plan for conserving the species 1 9 On evidence populations in core protected areas have increased but fringe areas important especially to vagrant juveniles continue to show strong declines and high mortality rates 191 Although listed today on the IUCN Red List as breeding species there Bonelli s eagle may be extinct as a nesting species in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 192 As of 2010 20 to 22 breeding territories have been found in Sicily and it was thought that this population holds about 95 of the remaining Italian population Sicilian eagles per study were shown to have high adult mortality 10 2 and at least 17 pairs in 2010 failed to breed altogether 9 86 In their Spanish stronghold the species has declined or disappeared in 27 out of 40 provinces since 1980 with over 20 reduction in north and central parts The coastal sierras of east and south Iberia hold highest European densities at 1 pair per 100 200 km2 39 77 sq mi but once formerly it held a pair per 60 km2 23 sq mi in the 1970s 6 10 193 In the Region of Murcia Spain Bonelli s eagle was considered the second most threatened raptor species behind only the lesser kestrel 194 In the Province of Burgos in northern Spain the number of pairs reduced from 25 27 to 10 between 1980 and 1996 Of 100 breeding attempts from 1988 to 1996 only 0 3 were successful and average success rate was only 0 35 despite surplus feeding beginning after 1992 195 From 200 or more pairs in Greece in the early 1980s the population has fallen to less than 50 6 What was roughly estimated to be about 50 pairs estimated earlier at up to 100 in Turkey in the late 1980s to the 1990s has recently been revised based on research to only 20 35 pairs in isolated small pockets 6 61 In Israel 28 pairs of Bonelli s eagle were known to be present in 1989 but little information has been obtained from the rest of Middle East and from Asia Israeli populations are estimated to have been halved in size By 2001 only 15 pairs were known to breed in Israel Besides the four species that have become locally extinct in Israel it is likely that Bonelli s eagle is the most endangered Israeli raptor 1 6 196 197 It was estimated that the maximum number in Asia is likely around 35 000 pairs but it could be well less than half of that Perhaps the only factor preventing authorities such as the IUCN from uplisting Bonelli s eagle to a more severe status is due to lack of extensive research on their population in the Asian range Strong declines in Asia may be occurring as well 1 6 A bird survey of a large area of Uttarakhand India where the species was historically present failed to find any signs of remaining Bonelli s eagles 198 In Gujarat India an analysis from the 1990s determined that the species was increasingly scarce due to human disturbance and logging 199 In multiple parts of the range certainly in western Europe as well as Cyprus Bonelli s eagles face a high degree of persecution by hunters gamekeepers and pigeon fanciers Shooting and poisoning of this species persist extensively into the 21st century 58 200 Habitat alteration and destruction e g development of roads intensified agriculture irrigation of dry fields in addition to reduced prey numbers and human disturbance in the nesting area are ongoing and increasing threats everywhere for this eagle 6 201 Even human activity such as large quantities of people on holiday has been shown to have a negative effect on this eagle as they may alter their range to avoid such activity 202 From 1990 to 1996 424 dead Bonelli s eagles in Spain were recorded 55 died due to electrocution and 26 due to poisoning and shooting Adults were mainly killed via persecution whereas most juveniles died by electrocution In Catalonia and central Spain 50 and 86 due to electrocution whereas persecution was more major in Levante and Green Spain accounting for 52 and 43 of deaths 203 Abandonment of territories could not be correlated to interspecific competition but was linked to human influence and persecution 204 In Sicily the main threats are thought to be habitat fragmentation and intensifying agriculture Previously egg collectors were semi regularly exacerbating the reduction of the species on Sicily but this behaviour has seemingly declined mercifully in recent years 9 86 205 Given its relative scarcity in Crete only a small number of Bonelli s eagles were recovered dead from persecution when compared to other raptors However death through shooting and poisoning is surely not sustainable given the low population there 206 Increasing overhead power line collisions resulting in electrocution from highly dangerous pylons are a major cause of mortality resulting in unsustainably high population turnover In one Spanish study area 56 of juveniles and 13 of adults were killed by electrocution In France 44 of radio tagged post dispersal juveniles were killed by electrocution 207 208 209 Wind farms in Spain are a potential growing source of changed territories and deaths for Bonelli s eagles but they are likely to be less effected locally than golden eagles 210 Lead poisoning from bullets in injured small game which have been associated with high lead levels in eagle feathers in several parts of their range 211 Research from western Europe and northeastern Africa has indicated low genetic diversity in these populations which cause concerns of a population bottleneck for the species in these former strongholds 212 Conservation efforts edit Research has indicated that the most significant predicted cause to a strong recovery for Bonelli s eagles in Europe would be conservation of appropriate habitats followed by higher survival rates for territorial and non territorial eagles 213 214 It was suggested in 2008 that reducing risk of electric powerline collisions and reducing persecution are the most immediate and significant measures that should be taken to retain Bonelli s eagles in Spain 173 215 216 Research indicated that 99 of avian mortality would be reduced by modifying only 27 of the pylons in areas inhabited by the eagles 207 As reported by 2015 biologists in coordination with local authorities started to properly insulate dangerous powerlines in green areas in order to help converse this and other threatened birds It was shown that the local population growth rates increased quickly as a result from 0 82 to 0 98 However this study showed an apparent increase of anthropogenic mortality from other causes such as car collisions in sync with reduced electrocution 217 It was estimated that for stage of 2008 2014 0 28 and 0 64 of mortality was still due to electrocution for territorial and non territorial eagles 218 In further efforts to converse the species locally Spanish researchers have provided supplemental feedings to these eagles which may improve their odds of successfully producing young 219 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p BirdLife International 2019 Aquila fasciata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T22696076A155464015 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T22696076A155464015 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Gill F D Donsker amp P Rasmussen Eds 2020 IOC World Bird List v10 2 doi 10 14344 IOC ML 10 2 a b Beolens Bo Watkins Michael 2003 Whose Bird Men and Women Commemorated in the Common Names of Birds London Christopher Helm p 59 ISBN 978 0713666472 a b Aimassi G 2015 The original description of Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Vieillot Aves Accipitridae Zoological Bibliography 4 1 1 15 Jerdon T C 1862 The birds of India Vol 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm Ferguson Lees J Christie D 2001 Raptors of the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 618 12762 3 Ontiveros D Pleguezuelos J M amp Caro J 2005 Prey density prey detectability and food habits the case of Bonelli s eagle and the conservation measures Biological Conservation 123 1 19 25 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Moleon M Sanchez Zapata J A Gil Sanchez J M Ballesteros Duperon E Barea Azcon J M amp Virgos E 2012 Predator prey relationships in a Mediterranean vertebrate system Bonelli s eagles rabbits and partridges Oecologia 168 3 679 689 a b c d e Lopez Lopez P Sara M amp Di Vittorio M 2012 Living on the edge assessing the extinction risk of critically endangered Bonelli s Eagle in Italy PLOS ONE 7 5 e37862 a b Sanchez Alonso C amp Real J 2005 Bonelli s Eagle in a state of emergency Garcilla 122 6 9 a b Lerner H Christidis L Gamauf A Griffiths C Haring E Huddleston C J Kabra S Kocum A Krosby M Kvaloy K Mindell D Rasmussen P Rov N Wadleigh R Wink M amp Gjershaug J O 2017 Phylogeny and new taxonomy of the Booted Eagles Accipitriformes Aquilinae Zootaxa 4216 4 301 320 Vali U 2002 Mitochondrial pseudo control region in old world eagles genus Aquila Molecular Ecology 11 10 2189 2194 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Brown Leslie and Amadon Dean 1986 Eagles Hawks and Falcons of the World The Wellfleet Press ISBN 978 1555214722 Amadon D 1982 The genera of booted eagles Aquila and relatives Journal of the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology 14 2 3 108 121 Kemp A C 1994 African Hawk eagle P 199 in del Hoyo Elliott J A amp Sargatal J eds Handbook of birds of the world Vol 2 New World vultures to guineafowl Lynx Edicions Barcelona Spain Simmons R E 2005 African Hawk Eagle Aquila spilogaster Pp 533 534 in P A R Hockey W R J Dean and P G Ryan eds Roberts Birds of Southern Africa 7th ed Trustees of the John Voelcker Bird Book Fund Cape Town South Africa Wink M amp Sauer Gurth H 2004 Phylogenetic relationships in diurnal raptors based on nucleotide sequences of mitochondrial and nuclear marker genes Raptors worldwide 483 498 a b Helbig A J Kocum A Seibold I Braun M J 2005 A multi gene phylogeny of aquiline eagles Aves Accipitriformes reveals extensive paraphyly at the genus level PDF Molecular Phylogenetics amp Evolution 35 1 147 164 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2004 10 003 PMID 15737588 Clark W S 2012 The eagle genus Hieraaetus is distinct from Aquila with comments on the name Ayres Eagle Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 132 295 298 Crochet P A Raty L De Smet G Anderson B Barthel P H Collinson J M amp Knox A G 2010 AERC TAC s taxonomic recommendations a b c Watson Jeff 2010 The Golden Eagle A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4081 1420 9 Lerner H R L Mindell D P 2005 Phylogeny of eagles Old World vultures and other Accipitridae based on nuclear and mitochondrial DNA PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 37 2 327 346 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 04 010 PMID 15925523 a b c d Trainor C R Debus S J Olsen J Norman J A amp Christidis L 2013 Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata renschi in the Lesser Sundas Wallacea distribution taxonomic status likely origins and conservation status Forktail 29 100 106 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar Naoroji R amp Schmitt N J 2007 Birds of prey of the Indian subcontinent Om Books International a b CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd Edition by John B Dunning Jr Editor CRC Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 a b c d e f Garcia V Moreno Opo R amp Tinto A 2013 Sex Differentiation of Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata in Western Europe using Morphometrics and Plumage Colour Patterns Ardeola 60 2 261 278 a b c d e f g Clark W S amp Schmitt N J 1999 A field guide to the raptors of Europe the Middle East and North Africa Oxford University Press USA Gomez J E amp Calle M S 2016 Birdwatching in Donana Cramp S Simmons K E L 1980 Birds of the Western Palearctic Vol 2 Oxford Oxford University Press Dementiev G P Gladkov N A Ptushenko E S Spangenberg E P amp Sudilovskaya A M 1966 Birds of the Soviet Union vol 1 Israel Program for Scientific Translations Jerusalem Rasmussen P C amp Anderton J C 2005 Birds of south Asia the Ripley guide Washington DC Ali S amp Ripley S D 1983 Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan Together with Those of Bangladesh Nepal Bhutan and Sri Lanka Oxford University Press a b c Whistler H 1940 How do large raptorial birds hunt their prey Ibis 4 732 735 a b c d Brown L 1977 Eagles of the World Universe Books Bortolotti G R 1984 Age and sex size variation in Golden Eagles Journal of Field Ornithology 55 54 66 a b Ali Salim 1993 The Book of Indian Birds Bombay Bombay Natural History Society ISBN 0 19 563731 3 a b c d e f Forsman D 1999 The raptors of Europe and the Middle East a handbook of field identification London T amp AD Poyser a b Svensson Lars 2009 Guida degli uccelli d Europa Nord Africa e vicino oriente in Italian Ricca Editore p 100 ISBN 9788866940005 a b c d e Porter R F 1981 Flight identification of European raptors A amp C Black Forsman D 2016 Flight Identification of Raptors of Europe North Africa and the Middle East Bloomsbury Publishing Kemp A amp Kemp M 2006 Sasol Birds of Prey New Edition Struik Negro J J amp Galvan I 2018 Behavioural Ecology of Raptors In Birds of Prey pp 33 62 Springer Cham a b Steyn P 1983 Birds of prey of southern Africa Their identification and life histories Croom Helm Beckenham UK 1983 Meade Waldo E G B 1903 XVIII Bird Notes from Morocco and the Great Atlas Ibis 45 2 196 214 Jourdain F C R 1915 Notes on the bird life of eastern Algeria Ibis 3 133 159 Bundy G 1976 The birds of Libya BOU Check list 1 102 Borrow N amp Demey R 2001 A guide to the birds of western Africa Princeton NJ Thiollay J M 2006 Severe decline of large birds in the Northern Sahel of West Africa a long term assessment Bird Conservation International 16 4 353 365 Global Raptor Information Network 2020 Species account Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Downloaded from http www globalraptors org on 12 Aug 2020 Cohen C Mills M amp Francis J 2015 First records for Somalia of Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Short toed Snake Eagle Circaetus gallicus and Red breasted Wheatear Oenanthe bottae Bulletin of the African Bird Club 22 2 225 228 Cugnasse J M Ravayrol A Cramm P Goujon C Morvan R Nozerand R Pompidor J P amp Ricau B 1996 Large raptors in Languedoc Roussillon SE France past present and future in Muntaner J Mayol J Biology and conservation of Mediterranean raptors 1994 371 379 Toso S 1972 Observazioni di rapaci diurni in Sardegna Rivista Italiana di Ornitologia 42 435 444 Kralj J amp Barisic S 2013 Rare birds in Croatia Third report of the Croatian Rarities Committee Natura Croatica Periodicum Musei Historiae Naturalis Croatici 22 2 375 396 Hallmann B 1985 Status and conservation problems of birds of prey in Greece Conservation Studies on Raptors ICBP Technical Publication 5 55 59 Susic G Marinkovic S Mandic R amp Kovacic D 1983 Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Vieillot 1822 on the Island of Krk Larus 200 202 Marinkovic S amp Orlandic L 1989 Bonelli Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus V in Yugoslavia Larus 40 179 183 Baumgart W Kasparek M amp Stephan B 1995 Birds of Syria M Kasparek Verlag a b c d e Kassinis N 2010 Demographics of the Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata population in Cyprus Bird Census News 23 1 2 21 27 Ramadan Jaradi G Bara T amp Ramadan Jaradi M 2008 Revised checklist of the birds of Lebanon 1999 2007 Sandgrouse 30 1 22 Shirihai H Dovrat E Christie D A amp Harris A 1996 The birds of Israel Vol 692 London Academic Press a b Vaassen E W Status and occurrence of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Turkey and Eastern Mediterranean A Population Estimate Raptor Research amp Rehabilitation Center Turkey Aspinall S amp Hellyer P 2006 Important bird areas of the United Arab Emirates British Birds 99 11 546 Kilic A Karakas R amp Biricik M 2003 Observations on a newly detected breeding site of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in south eastern Anatolia Zoology in the Middle East 30 1 37 41 Jennings M C 2004 Breeding birds in central Arabia 1978 2003 Sandgrouse 26 1 35 47 Desfayes M amp Praz J C 1978 Notes on habitat and distribution of montane birds in southern Iran Bonner Zoologische Beitrage 29 1 18 37 Bukreyev S A 1998 Materials on breeding of the Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Kopetdagh Turkmenistan Ornitologiya 28 154 158 Round P D 1983 Some recent bird records from northern Thailand Nat Hist Bull Siam Soc 31 2 123 138 Scharringa J 1994 A record of the Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Thailand Natural History Bulletin of the Siam Society 42 291 MacKinnon J R MacKinnon J Phillipps K amp He F Q 2000 A field guide to the birds of China Oxford University Press Carey G 2001 The Avifauna of Hong Kong Hong Kong Bird Watching Society Trainor C R 2002 The birds of Adonara Lesser Sundas Indonesia Forktail 93 100 Franco A 1980 Observacion de Hieraaetus fasciatus en una corriente migratoria otonal de rapaces en Ceuta Donana Acta Vertebrat 7 263 Billet J 1994 Aigle de Bonelli Survie et resistance en region Paca 25 18 Klose A 1979 Habichtsadler Hieraaetus fasciatus bei Regensburg Anzeiger der Ornithologischen Gesellschaft in Bayern 17 177 178 Alessandria G amp Boano G 2011 Le comparse dell aquila di Bonelli Aquila fasciata in Italia nord occidentale eventi eccezionali o normale erratismo Avocetta 35 3 12 Scott R E 1997 Opazovanje kraguljega orla Hieraaetus fasciatus junija 1997 pri Predjamskem gradu Acrocephalus 18 98 99 Clarke T 2006 Field guide to the birds of the Atlantic islands Christopher Helm Wassink A amp Oreel G J 2007 The birds of Kazakhstan A Wassink Lee W S Ku T H amp Park J Y 2000 A field guide to the birds of Korea LG Evergreen Foundation Tordoff A W amp Eames J C 2001 New additions to the list of birds of Vietnam Oriental Bird Club Bulletin 33 37 38 Jeyarajasingam A amp Pearson A 1999 A field guide to the birds of West Malaysia and Singapore Oxford University Press Baccetti N amp Spagnesi M 1987 Rapaci Mediterranei III Atti del Quarto Colloquio Internazionale sui Rapaci Mediterranei Supplemento alle Ricerche di Biologia della Selvaggina 12 1 316 a b c d e Carrascal L M amp Seoane J 2009 Factors affecting large scale distribution of the Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata in Spain Ecological Research 24 3 565 573 a b c d e Real J Bosch R Tinto A amp Hernandez Matias A 2016 Identifying key habitats for the conservation of Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata using radiotracking Ibis 158 3 556 568 a b Martinez Miranzo B Banda E I amp Aguirre J I 2016 Multiscale analysis of habitat selection by Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata in NE Spain European journal of wildlife research 62 6 673 679 a b c d e f Di Vittorio M Sara M amp Lopez Lopez P 2012 Habitat preferences of Bonelli s Eagles Aquila fasciata in Sicily Bird Study 59 2 207 217 a b Bahat O 1989 Aspects in the ecology and biodynamics of the Golden Eagle Aquila chrysaetos homeyeri in the arid regions of Israel Master s Thesis Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel Thiollay J 1980 L evolution des peuplements d oiseaux le long dun gradient altitudinal dans l Himalaya central 34 199 269 a b c d Marmasse A amp Vilatte M 1995 Prey capture and aerial acrobatics of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasicatus Faune de Provence 16 123 Watve M G Sant N R amp Joshi V 1995 Why Bonelli s Eagles hunt in pair an assessment of individual and paired hunting successes Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 91 355 359 a b c d e f Martinez J E Zuberogoitia I Gomez G Escarabajal J M Cerezo E Jimenez Franco M V amp Calvo J F 2014 Attack success in Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Ornis Fennica 91 2 67 Prakash V 1988 The general ecology of raptors in Keoladeo National Park Bharatpur Doctoral dissertation Ph D thesis Bombay University Mumbai India a b c d e f Iezekiel S Bakaloudis D E amp Vlachos C G 2004 The diet of the Bonelli s eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Cyprus In Raptors worldwide proceedings of the VI world conference on birds of prey and owls Berlin World Working Group on Birds of Prey MME pp 581 87 Real J 1996 Biases in diet study methods in the Bonelli s Eagle Journal of Wildlife Management 60 632 638 a b c d e f Jordano P 1981 Relaciones interespecificas y coexistencia entre el aguila real Aquila chrysaetos y el aguila perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus en Sierra Morena central Ardeola 28 67 88 a b c d e f g Alivizatos H amp Bourdakis S Diet and breeding success of the Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Greece preliminary data International Hawkwatcher 5 3 6 MARTI C D amp KORPIMAKI E 2012 TROPHIC STRUCTURE OF RAPTOR COMMUNITIES A THREE CONTINENT Current Ornithology 10 47 a b c d e f g h i j k l Mayor J R 2014 Study of the Feeding Ecology of Bonelli s Eagle Effects of Diet on Body Condition Vital Rates and Demography Universitat de Barcelona Doctoral dissertation a b c d e f g h i j k Morvan R 2010 Aigle de Bonelli Hieraaetus fasciatus presentation de l espece et des causes de son declin Rev sci Bourgogne Nature 11 228 235 a b c d e f g h i j Palma L Beja P Pais M amp Cancela Da Fonseca L 2006 Why do raptors take domestic prey The case of Bonelli s eagles and pigeons Journal of applied ecology 43 6 1075 1086 Caro J Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2011 The feeding ecology of Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata floaters in southern Spain implications for conservation European Journal of Wildlife Research 57 4 729 736 a b c Palomares F amp Delibes M 1997 Predation upon European rabbits and their use of open and closed patches in Mediterranean habitats Oikos 407 410 a b c d e Moleon M amp Sanchez Zapata J A 2007 Non breeding feeding ecology of territorial Bonelli s eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus in the Iberian Peninsula Ardeola 54 1 135 143 Moleon M Sanchez Zapata J A Real J Garcia Charton J A Gil Sanchez J M Palma L Bautista J amp Bayle P 2009 Large scale spatio temporal shifts in the diet of a predator mediated by an emerging infectious disease of its main prey Journal of Biogeography 36 8 1502 1515 Handrinos G amp Akriotis T 1997 The birds of Greece Christopher Helm Miranzo B M 2017 Ecologia espacial del aguila de Bonelli Aquila fasciata en Aragon Universidad Complutense de Madrid Departamento de Zoologia y Antropologia Doctoral thesis a b Pande S Yosef R Morelli F Pawar R amp Mone R 2018 Diet and habitat affinities in six raptor species in India Avian Research 9 1 36 a b c d Resano J Hernandez Matias A Real J amp Pares F 2011 Using stable isotopes to determine dietary patterns in Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata nestlings Journal of Raptor Research 45 4 342 353 a b c d e f g Resano J Bayle P Real J Hernandez A Vincent Martin N amp Ravayrol A 2012 Analyse du regime alimentaire de l Aigle de Bonelli Hieraaetus fasciatus Vieillot 1822 pendant la saison de reproduction 2010 en France Universite de Barcelone Equip de Biologia de la Conservacio 1 95 101 Daunt F Wanless S Harris M P Money L amp Monaghan P 2007 Older and wiser improvements in breeding success are linked to better foraging performance in European shags Functional Ecology 21 3 561 567 a b Beton D Snape R amp Saydam B 2013 Status and ecology of the Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciatus in the Pentadaktylos Mountain Range Cyprus Aves Falconiformes Zoology in the Middle East 59 2 123 130 Aviles J M Sanchez J M Medina F J 1998 Response of the crane Grus grus to potential predators in traditional wintering areas Vogelwarte 39 202 203 a b c d e f Abuladze A 2013 Birds of prey of Georgia Materials towards a Fauna of Georgia Issue VI Tbilisi Molina Morales M Martinez J G amp Aviles J M 2012 Factors affecting natal and breeding magpie dispersal in a population parasitized by the great spotted cuckoo Animal Behaviour 83 3 671 680 Bayle P amp Wilhelm J 1987 An unusual prey of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus a Budgerigar Melopsittacus undulatus Faune de Provence 8 82 83 a b Gil Sanchez J M 1998 Seleccion de presa por el Aguila azor Perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus durante el periodo de nidificacion en la provincia de Granada SE de Espana Ardeola 45 2 151 160 a b Kumawat R Saran R P amp Purohit A 2018 Bonelli s Eagle Records of predation on Varanus griseus and Ptyonoprogne concolor by Aquila fasciata in Agolai Jodhpur India ZOO S PRINT 33 5 Elosegui J 1974 Informe preliminar sobre alimentacion de aves rapaces en Navarra y provincias limitrofes Ardeola 19 2 249 256 Amezian M Irizi A Errati A Loran H El Khamlichi R Morandini V Gonzalez D G Garrido J R 2015 Spanish Imperial Eagles and other eagles found electrocuted in Morocco and proposition of correction measures a b Burger J Hiessler N Ponchon C amp Vincent Martin N 2013 Plan national d actions en faveur de l Aigle de Bonelli Aquila fasciata 2014 2023 In Ministere de l environnement et du developpement durable et de l energie Jourdain F C R Wallis H M amp Ratcliff F R 1915 Notes on the Bird Life of Eastern Algeria Ibis 57 1 133 169 Nemeth A Hegyeli Z Sendula T Horvath M Czaban D amp Csorba G 2016 Danger underground and in the open predation on blind mole rats Rodentia Spalacinae revisited Mammal Review 46 3 204 214 Mate I Barrull J Gosalbez J Ruiz Olmo J amp Salicru M 2015 The role of the southern water vole Arvicola sapidus in the diet of predators a review Mammal review 45 1 30 40 Kumar S 1993 Bonelli s Eagle Hieraatus fasciatus killing a Blackbuck Antilope cervicapra fawn Journal of Raptor Research 27 4 218 219 Palazon S Camps D Carbonell F amp Grajera J 2016 Predation of the Weasel Mustela nivalis by diurnal raptors Galemys 28 55 67 Moreno Rueda G Pizarro M Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2009 The coexistence of the eagles Aquila chrysaetos and Hieraaetus fasciatus increases with low human population density intermediate temperature and high prey diversity In Annales Zoologici Fennici Vol 46 No 4 pp 283 290 Finnish Zoological and Botanical Publishing Fernandez C amp Insausti J A 1990 Golden eagles take up territories abandoned by Bonelli s eagles in Northern Spain Journal of Raptor Research 24 124 125 Dobado Berrios P M Alvarez R amp Leiva A 1998 El Aguila Perdicera en la provincia de Cordoba Quercus 154 48 49 Ontiveros D 2000 Ecologia de una poblacion de Aguila Perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus del sureste iberico plan de conservacion Tesis doctoral Universidad de Granada Granada Carrete M Sanchez Zapata J Calvo J F amp Lande R 2005 Demography and habitat availability in territorial occupancy of two competing species Oikos 108 125 136 Cheylan G 1973 Notes on the competition between the Golden Eagle Aquila chrysaetos and Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Alauda 41 203 212 Martinez J E Martinez J A Zuberogoitia I Zabala J Redpath S M amp Calvo J F 2008 The effect of intra and interspecific interactions on the large scale distribution of cliff nesting raptors Ornis Fennica 85 1 13 21 Fernandez C amp Donazar J A 1991 Griffon Vultures Gyps fulvus occupying eyries of other cliff nesting raptors Bird Study 38 1 42 44 a b Ontiveros D Caro J amp Pleguezuelos J M 2008 Possible functions of alternative nests in raptors the case of Bonelli s Eagle Journal of Ornithology 149 2 253 259 Galvez M Aris S Baques J M 1998 Nidificacion de carabo comun Strix aluco en nido abandonado de aguila perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus Butlleti del Grup Catala d Anellament 15 43 45 Delibes Mateos M Redpath S M Angulo E Ferreras P amp Villafuerte R 2007 Rabbits as a keystone species in southern Europe Biological Conservation 137 1 149 156 Moreno S Villafuerte R Cabezas S amp Lombardi L 2004 Wild rabbit restocking for predator conservation in Spain Biological Conservation 118 2 183 193 Lloveras L Moreno Garcia M amp Nadal J 2009 The eagle owl Bubo bubo as a leporid remains accumulator taphonomic analysis of modern rabbit remains recovered from nests of this predator International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 19 5 573 592 Voous K H 1988 Owls of the Northern Hemisphere The MIT Press 0262220350 Sanchez R Margalida A Gonzalez L M amp Oria J 2008 Biases in diet sampling methods in the Spanish Imperial Eagle Aquila adalberti Ornis Fennica 85 3 82 89 Manosa S 1994 Goshawk diet in a Mediterranean area of northeastern Spain Journal of Raptor Research 28 2 84 92 Donazar J amp Ceballos O 1989 Selective predation by eagle owls Bubo bubo on rabbits Oryctolagus cuniculus age and sex preferences Ornis Scandinavica 117 122 a b Lourenco R Santos S M Rabaca J E amp Penteriani V 2011 Superpredation patterns in four large European raptors Population Ecology 53 1 175 185 Rabaca J E Lourenco R Penteriani V Delgado M D M amp Marchi Bartolozzi M 2011 Kill fore being killed an experimental approach supports the predator removal hypothesis as a determinant of intraguild predation in top predators Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 65 9 1709 1714 Sant N Shelke V amp Shelke S 2013 On the breeding biology of the Indian Spotted Eagle Aquila hastata Indian Birds 8 2 29 32 Lopez Lopez P Garcia Ripolles C Gimenez J amp Urios V 2016 A case of predation of a Eurasian Eagle Owl by a Bonelli s Eagle Journal of Raptor Research 50 4 422 425 Resano Mayor J Hernandez Matias A Real J Moleon M Pares F Inger R amp Bearhop S 2014 Multi scale effects of nestling diet on breeding performance in a terrestrial top predator inferred from stable isotope analysis PLOS ONE 9 4 e95320 Bayle P 1987 De couverte des restes d un aigle de Bonelli Hieraaetus fasciatus juvenile dans une aire de Hibou Grand duc Bubo bubo en Provence Faune de Provence 8 49 53 Real J amp Manosa S 1990 Eagle owl Bubo bubo predation on juvenile Bonelli s Eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus Journal of Raptor Research 24 69 71 Bosch R Real J Tinto A amp Zozaya E L 2007 An adult male Bonelli s eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus eaten by a subadult golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos Journal of Raptor Research 41 4 338 Gil Sanchez J M Molino Garrido F Valenzuela Serrano G 1996 Seleccion de habitat de nidificacion por el Aguila perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus en Granada SE de Espana Ardeola 43 189 197 Wilhelm J 1986 On the intimacy of a pair of Bonelli s Eagles in Provence Ciconia 10 43 Simmons R E amp Mendelsohn J M 1993 A critical review of cartwheeling flights of raptors Ostrich 64 1 13 24 Perez Garcia J M Margalida A Afonso I Ferreiro E Gardiazabal A Botella F amp Sanchez Zapata J A 2013 Interannual home range variation territoriality and overlap in breeding Bonelli s eagles Aquila fasciata tracked by GPS satellite telemetry Journal of Ornithology 154 1 63 71 Martinez Miranzo B Banda E Gardiazabal A Ferreiro E amp Aguirre J I 2016 Differential spatial use and spatial fidelity by breeders in Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Journal of ornithology 157 4 971 979 a b Ferreira A 2011 Microhabitat factors affecting nest site selection and breeding success of tree nesting Bonelli s Eagles Aquila fasciata Doctoral dissertation Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2000 Influence of prey densities in the distribution and breeding success of Bonelli s eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus management implications Biological conservation 93 1 19 25 Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2003 Physical environmental and human factors influencing productivity in Bonelli s eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Granada SE Spain Biodiversity amp Conservation 12 6 1193 1203 Ontiveros D 1999 SELECTION OF NEST CLIFFS BY BONELLI S EAGLE HIETUS FASCIATUS IN SOUTHEASTERN SPAIN Journal of Raptor Res 33 2 110 116 Dias A Palma L Carvalho F Neto D Real J amp Beja P 2017 The role of conservative versus innovative nesting behavior on the 25 year population expansion of an avian predator Ecology and evolution 7 12 4241 4253 Gomez J A B amp Rossell A B 1994 Primer cas de nidificacio en arbre d aliga Perdiuera Hieraaetus fasciatus a Catalunya Butlleti del Grup Catala d Anellament 11 85 87 Billet J 1991 First case in France of tree nesting Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Alauda 59 111 Hume A O 1873 The nests and eggs of Indian birds Vol 1 Superintendent of Printing Rivoire A 1979 Pontes de trois oeufs et elevage de trois jeunes chez Hieraaetus fasciatus Alauda 41 41 42 Ilani G amp Shalmon B 1984 Bonelli s Eagle triplets Israel Land and Nature 9 81 a b Real J Manosa S amp Codina J 1998 Post nestling dependence period in the Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Ornis Fennica 75 3 129 137 Watve M Joshi V Sant N amp Ranade S 1990 Food storage by Bonelli s Hawk eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 86 446 447 Balbontin J amp Ferrer M 2005 Factors affecting the length of the post fledging period in the Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Ardea 93 2 189 Minguez E Angulo E amp Siebering V 2001 Factors influencing length of the post fledging period and timing of dispersal in Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in southwestern Spain Journal of Raptor Research 35 3 228 234 Morvan R amp Dobchies F 1990 Dependence of young Bonelli s Eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus after fledging individual variation Alauda 58 150 162 Cadahia L Urios V amp Negro J J 2005 Survival and movements of satellite tracked Bonelli s Eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus during their first winter Ibis 147 2 415 419 Bautista J Calvo R Otero M Martin J amp Gil J M 1999 Aguilas perdiceras mueren en los tendidos del suroeste de Granada mientras se dispersa Quercus 165 49 a b Cheylan G Ravayrol A Cugnasse J M Billet J M amp Joulot C 1996 Dispersion des aigles de Bonelli Hieraaetus fasciatus juveniles bagues en France Alauda 64 4 413 419 Cadahia L Lopez Lopez P Urios V Soutullo A amp Negro J J 2009 Natal dispersal and recruitment of two Bonelli s Eagles Aquila fasciata a four year satellite tracking study Acta Ornithologica 44 2 193 198 Cadahia L Lopez Lopez P Urios V amp Negro J J 2010 Satellite telemetry reveals individual variation in juvenile Bonelli s eagle dispersal areas European Journal of Wildlife Research 56 6 923 930 Cugnasse J M amp Cramm P 1990 Wandering in Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in France Alauda 58 59 66 Moleon M Bautista J amp Madero A 2011 Communal roosting in young Bonelli s Eagles Aquila fasciata Journal of Raptor Research 45 4 353 357 Mascara R Ciaccio A Di Vittorio M Falci A Grenci S La Grua G amp Scuderi A 2012 Il Coordinamento Tutela Rapaci e le azioni di protezione dell Aquila di Bonelli Aquila fasciata in Sicilia Atti Secondo Convegno Italiano Rapaci Diurni e Notturni Treviso Di Vittorio M Seminara S amp Campobello D 2000 Aquila di Bonelli Hieraaetus fasciatus Status e biologia riproduttiva in Sicilia Rivista Italiana di Ornitologia 70 2 129 137 a b Hernandez Matias A Real J Pares F amp Llacuna S 2016 Siblicide in Bonelli s Eagle Aquila fasciata Journal of Raptor Research 50 1 125 129 Rico L Vidal A amp Villaplana J 1990 Datos sobre la distribucion reproduccion y alimentacion del aguila perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus Vieillot en la provincia de Alicante Medi Natural 2 103 111 Sanchez J M G 1994 Competencia entre aguila real y aguila perdicera en Granada Quercus 98 13 14 Simmons R 1988 Offspring quality and the evolution of cainism Ibis 130 3 339 357 Caro J Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2014 Cannibalism in Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata Journal of Raptor Research 48 3 292 295 Meyburg B U 1975 Protective management of eagles by reduction of nestling mortality World Confer Birds of Prey Vienna 387 391 Pande Satish Pawshe Amit Pednekar Banda Mahabal Anil Yosef Reuven 2004 How long is too long A case of fostering nestling Bonelli s Eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus Journal of Raptor Research The Raptor Research Foundation Inc 38 4 381 382 Moleon M Martin Jaramillo J Nieto J Benitez J R Bautista J Madero A amp del Junco O 2009 Successful replacement clutches in European Bonelli s eagles Hieraaetus fasciatus Journal of Raptor Research 43 2 164 166 Pompidor J amp Cugnasse J M 1990 A replacement clutch by Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus Alauda 58 141 Ontiveros D amp Pleguezuelos J M 2003 Influence of climate on Bonelli s eagle s Hieraaetus fasciatus V 1822 breeding success through the Western Mediterranean Journal of Biogeography 30 5 755 760 Palma L 1994 Nidificacion de aguilas perdiceras sobre arboles en Portugal Quercus 98 11 12 Carrascal L M amp Seoane J 2009 Linking density productivity and trends of an endangered species The Bonelli s eagle in Spain Acta Oecologica 35 3 341 348 Kotrosan D amp Hatibovic E 2012 Raptors in Bosnia and Herzegovina their status and perspectives for monitoring development Acrocephalus 33 154 155 173 179 Arroyo B 1991 Resultados del censo nacional de aguila perdicera Quercus 70 17 Abellan M D Martinez J E Palazon J A Esteve M A amp Calvo J F 2011 Efficiency of a protected area network in a Mediterranean region a multispecies assessment with raptors Environmental management 47 5 983 991 Fernandez A Roman J De La Torre J A Ansola L M Santamaria J Ventosa R Roman F amp Palma C 1998 Demografia y conservacion de una poblacion de Aguila Perdicera Hieraaetus fasciatus en declive Holarctic Birds of Prey 305 321 Bahat O 2001 Conservation of threatened raptor populations in Israel In Wings over Africa Proceedings of the International Seminar on Bird Migration Research Conservation Education and Flight Safety Tel Aviv Univ pp 177 189 Aspinall S 1998 The UAE s rarer breeding birds Tribulus 8 1 22 25 Dixit S Joshi V amp Barve S 2016 Bird diversity of the Amrutganga Valley Kedarnath Uttarakhand India with an emphasis on the elevational distribution of species Check List 12 2 1874 Khacher L 2003 The birds of Gujarat a Salim Ali centenary year overview Pp 104 154 in J C Daniel and G W Ugra eds Petronia fifty years of post independence ornithology in India a centenary dedication to Dr Salim Ali 1896 1996 Bombay Natural History Society and Oxford University Press Mumbai India Palma L 1985 The present situation of birds of prey in Portugal Conservation studies on Raptors 3 14 Mure M 1999 Identification of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus habitats using visual following methodology and expected results Alauda 67 289 296 Perona A M Urios V amp Lopez Lopez P 2019 Holidays Not for all Eagles have larger home ranges on holidays as a consequence of human disturbance Biological Conservation 231 59 66 Real J Grande J M Manosa S amp Sanchez Zapata J A 2001 Causes of death in different areas for Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Spain Bird study 48 2 221 228 Carrete M Sanchez Zapata J A Martinez J E Sanchez M A amp Calvo J F 2002 Factors influencing the decline of a Bonelli s eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus population in southeastern Spain demography habitat or competition Biodiversity amp Conservation 11 6 975 985 Di Vittorio M Rannisi G Di Trapani E Falci A Ciaccio A Rocco M Giacalone G Zafarana M Grenci S La Grua G Scuderi A Palazzolo F Cacopardi S Luiselli L Merlino S Lo Valvo M amp Lopez Lopez P 2018 Positive demographic effects of nest surveillance campaigns to counter illegal harvest of the Bonelli s eagle in Sicily Italy Animal conservation 21 2 120 126 Xirouchakis S 2004 Causes of raptor mortality in Crete Raptors Worldwide World Working Group on Birds of Prey MME Budapest 849 860 a b Manosa S 2001 Strategies to identify dangerous electricity pylons for birds Biodiversity amp Conservation 10 11 1997 2012 Soutullo A Lopez Lopez P amp Urios V 2008 Incorporating spatial structure and stochasticity in endangered Bonelli s eagle s population models implications for conservation and management Biological Conservation 141 4 1013 1020 Guzman J amp Castano J P 1998 Raptor mortality by electrocution in power lines in eastern Sierra Morena and Campo de Montiel Spain Ardeola 15 161 169 Martinez J E Calvo J F Martinez J A Zuberogoitia I Cerezo E Manrique J amp Bayo J 2010 Potential impact of wind farms on territories of large eagles in southeastern Spain Biodiversity and conservation 19 13 3757 3767 Gil Sanchez J M Molleda S Sanchez Zapata J A Bautista J Navas I Godinho R Garcia Fernandez A J amp Moleon M 2018 From sport hunting to breeding success Patterns of lead ammunition ingestion and its effects on an endangered raptor Science of the Total Environment 613 483 491 Cadahia L Negro J J amp Urios V 2007 Low mitochondrial DNA diversity in the endangered Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus from SW Europe Iberia and NW Africa Journal of Ornithology 148 1 99 104 Carrete M Sanchez Zapata J A Martinez J E amp Calvo J F 2002 Predicting the implications of conservation management a territorial occupancy model of Bonelli s eagle in Murcia Spain Oryx 36 4 349 356 Rollan A Hernandez Matias A amp Real J 2016 Guidelines for the conservation of Bonelli s eagle populations Equip de Biologia de la Conservacio Departament de Biologia Evolutiva Ecologia i Ciencies Ambientals Facultat de Biologia amp Institut de Recerca de la Biodiversitat IRBio Universitat de Barcelona Rollan A Real J Bosch R Tinto A amp Hernandez Matias A 2010 Modelling the risk of collision with power lines in Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus and its conservation implications Bird Conservation International 20 3 279 294 Tinto A Real J amp Manosa S 2010 Predicting and correcting electrocution of birds in Mediterranean areas The Journal of Wildlife Management 74 8 1852 1862 Chevallier C Hernandez Matias A Real J Vincent Martin N Ravayrol A amp Besnard A 2015 Retrofitting of power lines effectively reduces mortality by electrocution in large birds an example with the endangered Bonelli s eagle Journal of applied ecology 52 6 1465 1473 Hernandez Matias A Real J Pares F amp Pradel R 2015 Electrocution threatens the viability of populations of the endangered Bonelli s eagle Aquila fasciata in Southern Europe Biological Conservation 191 110 116 Iborra O 1989 First results of artificial feeding of three pairs of Bonelli s Eagle Hieraaetus fasciatus in Provence Faune de Provence 10 31 38 Collinson Martin June 2006 Splitting headaches Recent taxonomic changes affecting the British and Western Palaearctic lists British Birds 99 306 323 Archived from the original on 2020 02 29 Retrieved 2015 04 12 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aquila fasciata nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Aquila fasciata Bonelli s eagle in Spain Bonelli s eagle Conservation Biology Team of the University of Barcelona Ageing and sexing PDF 5 4 MB by Javier Blasco Zumeta amp Gerd Michael Heinze BirdLife species factsheet for Aquila fasciata Aquila fasciata Avibase nbsp Bonelli s eagle media Internet Bird Collection Bonelli s eagle photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Interactive range map of Aquila fasciata at IUCN Red List maps Audio recordings of Bonelli s eagle on Xeno canto Life Bonelli Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bonelli 27s eagle amp oldid 1189575129, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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