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Common nighthawk

The common nighthawk or bullbat (Chordeiles minor) is a medium-sized [3][4] crepuscular or nocturnal bird[3][5] of the Americas within the nightjar (Caprimulgidae) family, whose presence and identity are best revealed by its vocalization. Typically dark[3] (gray, black and brown),[5] displaying cryptic colouration and intricate patterns, this bird is difficult to spot with the naked eye during the day. This bird is most conspicuous when in its buoyant and erratic flight. The most remarkable feature of this aerial insectivore is its small beak that belies the massiveness of its mouth. Some claim appearance similarities to owls. With its horizontal stance[3] and short legs, the common nighthawk does not travel frequently on the ground, instead preferring to perch horizontally, parallel to branches, on posts, on the ground or on a roof.[5] The males of this species may roost together but the bird is primarily solitary. The common nighthawk shows variability in territory size.[4]

Common nighthawk
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Clade: Strisores
Order: Caprimulgiformes
Family: Caprimulgidae
Genus: Chordeiles
Species:
C. minor
Binomial name
Chordeiles minor
Subspecies

See text

Synonyms

Caprimulgus minor
Chordeiles virginianus

This caprimulgid has a large, flattened head with large eyes; facially it lacks rictal bristles. The common nighthawk has long slender wings that at rest extend beyond a notched tail. There is noticeable barring on the sides and abdomen,[4] also white wing-patches.[3]

The common nighthawk measures 22 to 25 cm (8.7 to 9.8 in) long,[4] displays a wing span of 51 to 61 cm (20 to 24 in)[6] weighs 55 to 98 g (1.9 to 3.5 oz),[4][6] and has a life span of 4 to 5 years.[4]

Names and etymology edit

 
In flight showing characteristic white wing bars

The genus name Chordeiles is from Ancient Greek khoreia, a dance with music, and deile, "evening". The specific minor is Latin for "smaller".[7]

The term "nighthawk", first recorded in the King James Bible version of 1611, was originally a local name in England for the European nightjar. Its use in the Americas referring to members of the genus Chordeiles and related genera was first recorded in 1778.[8]

The common nighthawk is sometimes called a "bull-bat", due to its perceived "bat-like" flight, and the "bull-like" boom made by its wings as it pulls from a dive.[6]

They, in addition to other nightjars, are also sometimes called "bugeaters", for their insectivore diet. The common nighthawk is likely the reason that Nebraska's state nickname was once the "Bugeater State", and its people were known as "bugeaters".[9][10][11] The Nebraska Cornhuskers college athletic teams were also briefly known the Bugeaters, before adopting their current name, which was also adopted by the state as a whole. A semi-professional soccer team in Nebraska, Nebraska Bugeaters FC, now uses the moniker.

Taxonomy edit

Within the family Caprimulgidae, the subfamily Chordeilinae (nighthawks) are limited to the New World and are distinguished from the subfamily Caprimulginae, by the lack of rictal bristles.

The American Ornithologists' Union treated the smaller Antillean nighthawk as conspecific with the common nighthawk until 1982.[4]

Up until the early 19th century, the common nighthawk and the whip-poor-will were thought to be one species. The latter's call was explained as the nocturnal expression of the common nighthawk. Alexander Wilson, "The Father of American Ornithology", correctly made the differentiation between the two species.

Subspecies edit

There are 9 currently recognized subspecies:[12]

  • C. m. panamensisEisenmann, 1962: breeds on the Pacific slope of Panama and north west Costa Rica. It is noted to depart Panama during winter for points in South America
  • C. m. neotropicalisSelander & Alvarez del Toro, 1955: breeds in south Mexico and Honduras
  • C. m. howelliOberholser, 1914: breeds in west central United States (north Texas, west Oklahoma, and Kansas to east Colorado, less typical form in central Colorado, north east Utah and Wyoming). It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi.
  • C. m. hesperisGrinnell, 1905: breeds in south west Canada (British Columbia and Alberta), the western interior of United States (Washington, Montana, Nevada, interior California, Utah, extreme north Colorado, west Wyoming). It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi.
  • C. m. aserriensisCherrie, 1896: breeds from south central Texas to north Mexico. It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi.
  • C. m. chapmaniCoues, 1888: breeds from southeast Kansas to east North Carolina and southwards to south east Texas and south Florida. It is the darkest of the subspecies.
  • C. m. sennettiCoues, 1888: breeds in the north Great Plains: east Montana, south Saskatchewan, Manitoba, southwards to North Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa. It is the palest of the subspecies.
  • C. m. henryiCassin, 1855: breeds from south east Utah and south west Colorado through mountains of west Texas, Arizona and New Mexico (less north east) to east Sonora, Chihuahua, and Durango. It is unique with ochraceous to deep cinnamon feather edges on upperparts.
  • C. m. minor(J.R. Forster, 1771): breeds from south east Alaska to Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, and south Canada/northern United States (Minnesota, Indiana) to Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia and Oklahoma. Considered by some as the darkest subspecies.[13]

History edit

This species is recorded as widespread during the Late Pleistocene, from Virginia to California and from Wyoming to Texas.[4]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, because their name contained the word "hawk", they had habits of diurnal insect hunting, and they travelled in migrating flocks, they were hunted for sport and nourishment and because they were seen as predators.[6]

Field identification edit

 
Common nighthawk in British Columbia

The common nighthawk is distinguished from other caprimulguids by its forked tail (includes a white bar in males); its long, unbarred, pointed wings with distinctive white patches; its lack of rictal bristles, and the key identifier – their unmistakable calls.[13] These birds range from 21 to 25 cm (8.3 to 9.8 in) in total length and from 51 to 61 cm (20 to 24 in) in wingspan.[14] Body mass can vary from 55 to 98 g (1.9 to 3.5 oz). Among standard measurements, the wing chord is 17.2 to 21.3 cm (6.8 to 8.4 in), the tail is 13 to 15.1 cm (5.1 to 5.9 in), the bill is 0.5 to 0.8 cm (0.20 to 0.31 in) and the tarsus is 1.2 to 1.6 cm (0.47 to 0.63 in).

The common nighthawk resembles both the Antillean nighthawk and the lesser nighthawk and occurs at least seasonally in the entire North American range of both of these species. The lesser nighthawk is a smaller bird and displays more buffy on the undertail coverts, where the common nighthawk shows white. Common nighthawks and Antillean nighthawks exhibit entirely dark on the basal portion of the primary feathers, whereas lesser nighthawks have bands of buffy spots. Common and Antillean nighthawks have a longer outermost primary conveying a pointier wing tip than the lesser nighthawk. The common nighthawk forages higher above ground than the lesser nighthawk and has a different call. The only reliable way to distinguish Antillean nighthawk without disturbance is also by the differences in their calls. Visually, they may only be distinguished as different from the common nighthawk once in the hand. Subtle differences are reported to be a challenge in field identification.[4]

Habitat and distribution edit

The common nighthawk may be found in forests, desert, savannahs, beach and desert scrub, cities,[3] and prairies,[4] at elevations of sea level or below to 3,000 m (9,800 ft).[3] Nighthawks prefer to nest in edge and early successional habitats, making them one of only a handful of birds which will live and hunt in burned or clearcut patches of forest.[15] The common nighthawk is drawn into urban built-up areas by insects.[5]

The common nighthawk is the only nighthawk occurring over the majority of northern North America.

Food availability is likely a key factor in determining which and when areas are suitable for habitation. The common nighthawk is not well adapted to survive in poor conditions, specifically low food availability. Therefore, a constant food supply consistent with warmer temperatures is a driving force for migration and ultimately survival.[citation needed]

It is thought that the bird is not able to enter torpor,[4] although recent evidence suggests it does.[13]

Migration edit

During migration, common nighthawks may travel 2,500 to 6,800 kilometres (1,600 to 4,200 mi). They migrate by day or night in loose flocks, frequently numbering in the thousands;[6] flocks have not been observed with a visible leader. The enormous distance travelled between breeding grounds and wintering range is one of the North America's longer migrations. [citation needed] The northbound journey commences at the end of February and the birds reach destinations as late as mid-June. The southbound migration commences mid-July and reaches a close in early October.[4]

 
Common nighthawk in flight, near Miami, Florida

While migrating, these birds have been reported travelling through middle America, Florida, the West Indies,[6] Cuba, the Caribbean and Bermuda,[4] finally completing their journey in the wintering grounds of South America,[6][13] primarily Argentina.[13]

As aerial insectivores, the migrants will feed en route,[6] congregating to hunt in marshes, rivers and on lakeshores. In Manitoba and Ontario, Canada, it is reported that during migration the nighthawks are seen most commonly in the late afternoon, into the evening,[4][5] with a burst of sunset feeding activities.[5]

Additionally, it has been noted that during migration the birds may fly closer to the ground than normal; possibly foraging for insects. There is speculation that feeding also occurs at higher altitudes.[citation needed]

The common nighthawk winters in southern South America, but distribution in this range is poorly known due to difficulties in distinguishing the bird from the lesser nighthawk and in differentiating between migrants and overwintering birds. In some South and Central American countries, a lack of study has led to restricted and incomplete records of the bird. Records do support wintering in Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina.[4]

Molt edit

In the common nighthawk, all bodily plumage and rectrices are replaced in the post-juvenile molt. This moult commences in September at the breeding grounds; the majority of the body plumage is replaced but wing-coverts and rectrices are not completed until January–February, once the bird arrives at the wintering grounds. There is no other molt prior to the annual molt of the adult. Common nighthawk adults have a complete molt that occurs mostly or completely on wintering grounds and is not completed until January or February.[13]

Behavior edit

Vocalization edit

There are no differences between the calls and song of the common nighthawk. The most conspicuous vocalization is a nasal peent or beernt during flight. Peak vocalizations are reported 30 to 45 minutes after sunset. [citation needed]

A croaking auk auk auk is vocalized by males while in the presence of a female during courtship. Another courtship sound, thought to be made solely by the males, is the boom, created by air rushing through the primaries after a quick downward flex of the wings during a daytime dive.

In defense of their nests, the females make a rasping sound, and males clap their wings together.[16] Strongly territorial males will perform dives against fledglings, females, and intruders such as humans or raccoons.[4]

Feeding and diet edit

Frequent flyers, the long-winged common nighthawk hunts on the wing[13] for extended periods at high altitudes or in open areas.[5] Crepuscular, flying insects are its preferred food source. The hunt ends as dusk becomes night, and resumes when night becomes dawn.[13] Nighttime feeding (in complete darkness) is rare,[4] even on evenings with a full moon.[13] The bird displays opportunistic feeding tendencies, although it may be able to fine-tune its meal choice in the moments before capture. Common nighthawks have been shown to prefer eating Coleopterids (beetles) and Hymenopterids (bees, ants, and wasps), seeking these insects out in their habitats.[17] While the most common type of insects in their diets are Lepidopterans (butterflies and moths), they actively avoid eating Dipterids (flies).[17]

Vision is presumed to be the main detection sense; no evidence exists to support the use of echolocation. The birds have been observed to converge on artificial light sources in an effort to forage for insects enticed by the light.[4] The average flight speed of common nighthawks is 23.4 km/h (14.5 mph).[18]

Drinking edit

The common nighthawk was observed to drink on its winter range by flying extremely low over the surface of the water.[19]

Waste excretion edit

The common nighthawk is recognized to discharge feces around nest and roosting positions. The bird will sporadically defecate in flight. The defecation is pungent.[4]

Reproduction and nesting edit

The common nighthawk breeds during the period of mid-March to early October.[6] It most commonly has only one brood per season, however sometimes a second brood is produced. The bird is assumed to breed every year. Reuse of nests by females in subsequent years has been reported.[4] A monogamous habit has also recently been confirmed.[13]

Courting and mate selection occur partially in flight. The male dives and booms (see Vocalization) in an effort to garner female attention;[4][5] the female may be in flight herself or stationary on the ground.

Copulation occurs when the pair settles on the ground together; the male with his rocking body, widespread tail wagging and bulging throat expresses guttural croaking sounds. This display by the male is performed repeatedly until copulation.[4]

The preferred breeding/nesting habitat is in forested regions with expansive rocky outcrops, in clearings, in burned areas[5] or in small patches of sandy gravel.[4] The eggs are not laid in a nest, but on bare rock, gravel,[5] or sometimes a living substrate such as lichen.[4] Least popular are breeding sites in agricultural settings.[20] As displayed in the latter portion of the 20th century, urban breeding is in decline.[5] If urban breeding sites do occur, they are observed on flat gravel rooftops.

It is a solitary nester, putting great distances between itself and other pairs of the same species, but a nest would more commonly occur in closer proximity to other species of birds.

Females choose the nest site and are the primary incubators of the eggs; males will incubate occasionally. Incubation time varies but is approximately 18 days. The female will leave the nest unattended during the evening in order to feed. The male will roost in a neighbouring tree (the spot he chooses changes daily); he guards the nest by diving, hissing, wing-beating or booming at the sites. In the face of predation, common nighthawks do not abandon the nest easily; instead they likely rely on their cryptic colouration to camouflage themselves. If a departure does occur, the females have been noted to fly away, hissing at the intruder[4] or performing a disturbance display.[13]

Incubation, hatching and young edit

The eggs are elliptical, strong, and variably coloured with heavy speckling. The common nighthawk lays two 6–7 g (0.21–0.25 oz) eggs per clutch; the eggs are laid over a period of 1 to 2 days. [citation needed] The female alone displays a brood patch.

The chicks may be heard peeping in the hours before they hatch. Once the chicks have broken out of the shells, the removal of the debris is necessary in order to avoid predators. The mother may carry the eggshells to another location or consume a portion of them. Once hatched, the nestlings are active and have their eyes fully or half open; additionally they display a sparing cover of soft down feathers. The chicks are semi-precocial. By day 2, the hatchlings' bodily mass will double and they will be able to self-propel towards their mother's call. The young will hiss at an intruder.

The young are fed by regurgitation before sunrise and after sunset. The male parent assists in feeding fledglings and will also feed the female during nesting. No records exist to support a parent's ability to physically carry a chick.

On their 18th day, the young will make their first flight; by days 25–30, they are flying proficiently. The young are last seen with their parents on day 30. Complete development is shown between their 45–50th day. At day 52, the juvenile will join the flock, potentially migrating. Juvenile birds, in both sexes, are lighter in colour and have a smaller white wing-patch than adult common nighthawks.[4]

Predators edit

Like other members of the caprimulgid clan, the nighthawk's ground nesting habits endanger eggs and nestlings to predation by ground carnivores, such as skunks, raccoons and opossums.[21] Confirmed predation on adults is restricted to domestic cats, golden eagles, and great horned owls.[22] Peregrine falcons have also been confirmed to attack nighthawks as prey, although the one recorded predation attempt was unsuccessful.[23] Other suspected predators are likely to attack them, such as dogs, coyotes, foxes, hawks, American kestrels,[24] owls, crows and ravens, and snakes.[25]

Status and conservation edit

There has been a general decline in the number of common nighthawks in North America, but some population increases also have occurred[4] in other geographical locations.[13] The bird's large range makes individual risk thresholds in specific regions difficult to establish.[1] In Ontario, the common nighthawk is rated as a species of special concern.[26]

The Common nighthawk's trait of being a ground-nesting bird makes it particularly susceptible to predators, some of which include domestic cats, ravens, snakes, dogs, coyotes, falcons and owls.

Lack of flat roofs, pesticides,[4] increased predation and loss of habitat[13] are noted factors of their decline. Further unstudied potential causes of decline include climate change, disease, road kills, man-made towers (posing aerial hazards), and parasites.[4]

The absence of flat roofs (made with gravel) in urban settings is an important cause of decline. In an effort to provide managed breeding areas, gravel pads have been added in the corners of rubberized roofs; this proves acceptable, as nesting has been observed.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2016). "Chordeiles minor". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22689714A93244252. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22689714A93244252.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Chordeiles minor". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Sibley, David Allen (2001). The Sibley Guide to Bird Life & Behaviour. Chanticleer Press, Inc.
  4. ^ 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 Poulin, R.; Grindal, S.; Brigham, R. (1996). "Common Nighthawk, no. 213". The Birds of North America. The American Ornithologists' Union.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l The Birds of Manitoba. Manitoba Avian Research Committee. Manitoba Naturalists Society. 2003. ISBN 9780969728016.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Elphick, J., ed. (2007). Atlas of Bird Migration. Firefly Books. ISBN 978-1554079711.
  7. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 104, 256. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  8. ^ "Nighthawk". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. ^ "NE [Nebraska] introduction". netstate.com.
  10. ^ Capace, Nancy (Jan 1, 1999). Encyclopedia of Nebraska. Somerset Publishers, Inc. pp. 2–3.
  11. ^ U.S. Boston, MA: D. Lothrop Company. 1890. p. 77. An index to the United States of America: Historical, geographical and political. A handbook of reference combining the "curious" in U.S. history.
  12. ^ Gill, F.; Donsker, D., eds. (2014). "IOC World Bird List" (4.4 ed.). doi:10.14344/IOC.ML.4.4. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Holyoak, D.T. (2001). Nightjars and their Allies: the Caprimulgiformes. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-854987-3.
  14. ^ . mountainnature.com. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  15. ^ Farrell, Claire E.; Wilson, Scott; Mitchell, Greg (2017). "Assessing the relative use of clearcuts, burned stands, and wetlands as breeding habitat for two declining aerial insectivores in the boreal forest". Forest Ecology and Management. 386: 62–70. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2016.11.026.
  16. ^ "Sounds". allaboutbirds.org. Common Nighthawk. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology.
  17. ^ a b Todd, L. Danielle; Poulin, Ray G.; Brigham, R. Mark (1998). "Diet of Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor: Caprimulgidae) Relative to Prey Abundance". American Midland Naturalist. 139 (1): 20–28. doi:10.1674/0003-0031(1998)139[0020:DOCNCM]2.0.CO;2.
  18. ^ Brigham, R.M.; Fenton, M.B.; Aldridge, H.D.J.N. (1998). "Flight speed of foraging Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor): Does the measurement technique matter?". American Midland Naturalist. 139 (2): 325–330. doi:10.1674/0003-0031(1998)139[0325:fsofcn]2.0.co;2. JSTOR 2426689. S2CID 86113224.
  19. ^ Canevari, M.; Canevari, P.; Carrizo, G.; Harris, G.; Mata, J.; Straneck, R. (1991). Nueva guia de las aves Argentinas [New Guide to the Birds of Argentina] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires: Fundacion Acindar. cited in Poulin, Grindal, & Brigham (1996).[4]
  20. ^ Gillette, L. (1991). "Survey of common nighthawks in Minnesota, 1990". The Loon. 62: 141–143. cited in Birds of Manitoba (2003, p. 238).[5]: 238 
  21. ^ Kantrud, H.A.; Higgins, K.F. (1992). "Nest and nest site characteristics of some groundnesting, nonpasserine birds of northern grasslands". Prairie Naturalist. 24: 67–84.
  22. ^ Olendorff, R.R. (1976). "The food habits of North American golden eagles". American Midland Naturalist. 95 (1): 231–236. doi:10.2307/2424254. JSTOR 2424254.
  23. ^ Bennett, G. (1987). "A vellication of nighthawks". Birdfinding in Canada. 7: 16.
  24. ^ Gross, A.O. (1940). Bent, A.C. (ed.). "Eastern Nighthawk". U.S. Natl. Mus. Bull. Life histories of North American cuckoos, goatsuckers, hummingbirds, and their allies. 176: 206–234.
  25. ^ Marzilli, V. (1989). "Up on the roof". Maine Fish and Wildlife. 31: 25–29.
  26. ^ "Common nighthawk". Government of Ontario. September 10, 2009.


External links edit

  • BirdLife species factsheet for Chordeiles minor
  • "Chordeiles minor". Avibase.  
  • "Common nighthawk media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Common nighthawk photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Interactive range map of Chordeiles minor at IUCN Red List maps
  • "Common nighthawk species account". Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology.
  • Audio recordings of Common nighthawk on Xeno-canto.

common, nighthawk, common, nighthawk, bullbat, chordeiles, minor, medium, sized, crepuscular, nocturnal, bird, americas, within, nightjar, caprimulgidae, family, whose, presence, identity, best, revealed, vocalization, typically, dark, gray, black, brown, disp. The common nighthawk or bullbat Chordeiles minor is a medium sized 3 4 crepuscular or nocturnal bird 3 5 of the Americas within the nightjar Caprimulgidae family whose presence and identity are best revealed by its vocalization Typically dark 3 gray black and brown 5 displaying cryptic colouration and intricate patterns this bird is difficult to spot with the naked eye during the day This bird is most conspicuous when in its buoyant and erratic flight The most remarkable feature of this aerial insectivore is its small beak that belies the massiveness of its mouth Some claim appearance similarities to owls With its horizontal stance 3 and short legs the common nighthawk does not travel frequently on the ground instead preferring to perch horizontally parallel to branches on posts on the ground or on a roof 5 The males of this species may roost together but the bird is primarily solitary The common nighthawk shows variability in territory size 4 Common nighthawk Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Clade Strisores Order Caprimulgiformes Family Caprimulgidae Genus Chordeiles Species C minor Binomial name Chordeiles minor J R Forster 1771 2 Subspecies See text Synonyms Caprimulgus minorChordeiles virginianus This caprimulgid has a large flattened head with large eyes facially it lacks rictal bristles The common nighthawk has long slender wings that at rest extend beyond a notched tail There is noticeable barring on the sides and abdomen 4 also white wing patches 3 The common nighthawk measures 22 to 25 cm 8 7 to 9 8 in long 4 displays a wing span of 51 to 61 cm 20 to 24 in 6 weighs 55 to 98 g 1 9 to 3 5 oz 4 6 and has a life span of 4 to 5 years 4 Contents 1 Names and etymology 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subspecies 2 2 History 2 3 Field identification 3 Habitat and distribution 3 1 Migration 4 Molt 5 Behavior 5 1 Vocalization 5 2 Feeding and diet 5 3 Drinking 5 4 Waste excretion 5 5 Reproduction and nesting 5 6 Incubation hatching and young 5 7 Predators 6 Status and conservation 7 References 8 External linksNames and etymology edit nbsp In flight showing characteristic white wing bars The genus name Chordeiles is from Ancient Greek khoreia a dance with music and deile evening The specific minor is Latin for smaller 7 The term nighthawk first recorded in the King James Bible version of 1611 was originally a local name in England for the European nightjar Its use in the Americas referring to members of the genus Chordeiles and related genera was first recorded in 1778 8 The common nighthawk is sometimes called a bull bat due to its perceived bat like flight and the bull like boom made by its wings as it pulls from a dive 6 They in addition to other nightjars are also sometimes called bugeaters for their insectivore diet The common nighthawk is likely the reason that Nebraska s state nickname was once the Bugeater State and its people were known as bugeaters 9 10 11 The Nebraska Cornhuskers college athletic teams were also briefly known the Bugeaters before adopting their current name which was also adopted by the state as a whole A semi professional soccer team in Nebraska Nebraska Bugeaters FC now uses the moniker Taxonomy editWithin the family Caprimulgidae the subfamily Chordeilinae nighthawks are limited to the New World and are distinguished from the subfamily Caprimulginae by the lack of rictal bristles The American Ornithologists Union treated the smaller Antillean nighthawk as conspecific with the common nighthawk until 1982 4 Up until the early 19th century the common nighthawk and the whip poor will were thought to be one species The latter s call was explained as the nocturnal expression of the common nighthawk Alexander Wilson The Father of American Ornithology correctly made the differentiation between the two species Subspecies edit There are 9 currently recognized subspecies 12 C m panamensis Eisenmann 1962 breeds on the Pacific slope of Panama and north west Costa Rica It is noted to depart Panama during winter for points in South America C m neotropicalis Selander amp Alvarez del Toro 1955 breeds in south Mexico and Honduras C m howelli Oberholser 1914 breeds in west central United States north Texas west Oklahoma and Kansas to east Colorado less typical form in central Colorado north east Utah and Wyoming It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi C m hesperis Grinnell 1905 breeds in south west Canada British Columbia and Alberta the western interior of United States Washington Montana Nevada interior California Utah extreme north Colorado west Wyoming It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi C m aserriensis Cherrie 1896 breeds from south central Texas to north Mexico It is darker than sennetti and paler and less cinnamon than henryi C m chapmani Coues 1888 breeds from southeast Kansas to east North Carolina and southwards to south east Texas and south Florida It is the darkest of the subspecies C m sennetti Coues 1888 breeds in the north Great Plains east Montana south Saskatchewan Manitoba southwards to North Dakota Minnesota and Iowa It is the palest of the subspecies C m henryi Cassin 1855 breeds from south east Utah and south west Colorado through mountains of west Texas Arizona and New Mexico less north east to east Sonora Chihuahua and Durango It is unique with ochraceous to deep cinnamon feather edges on upperparts C m minor J R Forster 1771 breeds from south east Alaska to Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada and south Canada northern United States Minnesota Indiana to Virginia North Carolina Georgia and Oklahoma Considered by some as the darkest subspecies 13 History edit This species is recorded as widespread during the Late Pleistocene from Virginia to California and from Wyoming to Texas 4 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries because their name contained the word hawk they had habits of diurnal insect hunting and they travelled in migrating flocks they were hunted for sport and nourishment and because they were seen as predators 6 Field identification edit nbsp Common nighthawk in British Columbia The common nighthawk is distinguished from other caprimulguids by its forked tail includes a white bar in males its long unbarred pointed wings with distinctive white patches its lack of rictal bristles and the key identifier their unmistakable calls 13 These birds range from 21 to 25 cm 8 3 to 9 8 in in total length and from 51 to 61 cm 20 to 24 in in wingspan 14 Body mass can vary from 55 to 98 g 1 9 to 3 5 oz Among standard measurements the wing chord is 17 2 to 21 3 cm 6 8 to 8 4 in the tail is 13 to 15 1 cm 5 1 to 5 9 in the bill is 0 5 to 0 8 cm 0 20 to 0 31 in and the tarsus is 1 2 to 1 6 cm 0 47 to 0 63 in The common nighthawk resembles both the Antillean nighthawk and the lesser nighthawk and occurs at least seasonally in the entire North American range of both of these species The lesser nighthawk is a smaller bird and displays more buffy on the undertail coverts where the common nighthawk shows white Common nighthawks and Antillean nighthawks exhibit entirely dark on the basal portion of the primary feathers whereas lesser nighthawks have bands of buffy spots Common and Antillean nighthawks have a longer outermost primary conveying a pointier wing tip than the lesser nighthawk The common nighthawk forages higher above ground than the lesser nighthawk and has a different call The only reliable way to distinguish Antillean nighthawk without disturbance is also by the differences in their calls Visually they may only be distinguished as different from the common nighthawk once in the hand Subtle differences are reported to be a challenge in field identification 4 Habitat and distribution editThe common nighthawk may be found in forests desert savannahs beach and desert scrub cities 3 and prairies 4 at elevations of sea level or below to 3 000 m 9 800 ft 3 Nighthawks prefer to nest in edge and early successional habitats making them one of only a handful of birds which will live and hunt in burned or clearcut patches of forest 15 The common nighthawk is drawn into urban built up areas by insects 5 The common nighthawk is the only nighthawk occurring over the majority of northern North America Food availability is likely a key factor in determining which and when areas are suitable for habitation The common nighthawk is not well adapted to survive in poor conditions specifically low food availability Therefore a constant food supply consistent with warmer temperatures is a driving force for migration and ultimately survival citation needed It is thought that the bird is not able to enter torpor 4 although recent evidence suggests it does 13 Migration edit During migration common nighthawks may travel 2 500 to 6 800 kilometres 1 600 to 4 200 mi They migrate by day or night in loose flocks frequently numbering in the thousands 6 flocks have not been observed with a visible leader The enormous distance travelled between breeding grounds and wintering range is one of the North America s longer migrations citation needed The northbound journey commences at the end of February and the birds reach destinations as late as mid June The southbound migration commences mid July and reaches a close in early October 4 nbsp Common nighthawk in flight near Miami Florida While migrating these birds have been reported travelling through middle America Florida the West Indies 6 Cuba the Caribbean and Bermuda 4 finally completing their journey in the wintering grounds of South America 6 13 primarily Argentina 13 As aerial insectivores the migrants will feed en route 6 congregating to hunt in marshes rivers and on lakeshores In Manitoba and Ontario Canada it is reported that during migration the nighthawks are seen most commonly in the late afternoon into the evening 4 5 with a burst of sunset feeding activities 5 Additionally it has been noted that during migration the birds may fly closer to the ground than normal possibly foraging for insects There is speculation that feeding also occurs at higher altitudes citation needed The common nighthawk winters in southern South America but distribution in this range is poorly known due to difficulties in distinguishing the bird from the lesser nighthawk and in differentiating between migrants and overwintering birds In some South and Central American countries a lack of study has led to restricted and incomplete records of the bird Records do support wintering in Ecuador Peru Bolivia Brazil Paraguay Uruguay and Argentina 4 Molt editIn the common nighthawk all bodily plumage and rectrices are replaced in the post juvenile molt This moult commences in September at the breeding grounds the majority of the body plumage is replaced but wing coverts and rectrices are not completed until January February once the bird arrives at the wintering grounds There is no other molt prior to the annual molt of the adult Common nighthawk adults have a complete molt that occurs mostly or completely on wintering grounds and is not completed until January or February 13 Behavior editVocalization edit There are no differences between the calls and song of the common nighthawk The most conspicuous vocalization is a nasal peent or beernt during flight Peak vocalizations are reported 30 to 45 minutes after sunset citation needed nbsp Chordeiles minor call source source Call of the common nighthawk Chordeiles minor Problems playing this file See media help A croaking auk auk auk is vocalized by males while in the presence of a female during courtship Another courtship sound thought to be made solely by the males is the boom created by air rushing through the primaries after a quick downward flex of the wings during a daytime dive In defense of their nests the females make a rasping sound and males clap their wings together 16 Strongly territorial males will perform dives against fledglings females and intruders such as humans or raccoons 4 Feeding and diet edit Frequent flyers the long winged common nighthawk hunts on the wing 13 for extended periods at high altitudes or in open areas 5 Crepuscular flying insects are its preferred food source The hunt ends as dusk becomes night and resumes when night becomes dawn 13 Nighttime feeding in complete darkness is rare 4 even on evenings with a full moon 13 The bird displays opportunistic feeding tendencies although it may be able to fine tune its meal choice in the moments before capture Common nighthawks have been shown to prefer eating Coleopterids beetles and Hymenopterids bees ants and wasps seeking these insects out in their habitats 17 While the most common type of insects in their diets are Lepidopterans butterflies and moths they actively avoid eating Dipterids flies 17 Vision is presumed to be the main detection sense no evidence exists to support the use of echolocation The birds have been observed to converge on artificial light sources in an effort to forage for insects enticed by the light 4 The average flight speed of common nighthawks is 23 4 km h 14 5 mph 18 Drinking edit The common nighthawk was observed to drink on its winter range by flying extremely low over the surface of the water 19 Waste excretion edit The common nighthawk is recognized to discharge feces around nest and roosting positions The bird will sporadically defecate in flight The defecation is pungent 4 Reproduction and nesting edit The common nighthawk breeds during the period of mid March to early October 6 It most commonly has only one brood per season however sometimes a second brood is produced The bird is assumed to breed every year Reuse of nests by females in subsequent years has been reported 4 A monogamous habit has also recently been confirmed 13 Courting and mate selection occur partially in flight The male dives and booms see Vocalization in an effort to garner female attention 4 5 the female may be in flight herself or stationary on the ground Copulation occurs when the pair settles on the ground together the male with his rocking body widespread tail wagging and bulging throat expresses guttural croaking sounds This display by the male is performed repeatedly until copulation 4 The preferred breeding nesting habitat is in forested regions with expansive rocky outcrops in clearings in burned areas 5 or in small patches of sandy gravel 4 The eggs are not laid in a nest but on bare rock gravel 5 or sometimes a living substrate such as lichen 4 Least popular are breeding sites in agricultural settings 20 As displayed in the latter portion of the 20th century urban breeding is in decline 5 If urban breeding sites do occur they are observed on flat gravel rooftops It is a solitary nester putting great distances between itself and other pairs of the same species but a nest would more commonly occur in closer proximity to other species of birds Females choose the nest site and are the primary incubators of the eggs males will incubate occasionally Incubation time varies but is approximately 18 days The female will leave the nest unattended during the evening in order to feed The male will roost in a neighbouring tree the spot he chooses changes daily he guards the nest by diving hissing wing beating or booming at the sites In the face of predation common nighthawks do not abandon the nest easily instead they likely rely on their cryptic colouration to camouflage themselves If a departure does occur the females have been noted to fly away hissing at the intruder 4 or performing a disturbance display 13 Incubation hatching and young edit The eggs are elliptical strong and variably coloured with heavy speckling The common nighthawk lays two 6 7 g 0 21 0 25 oz eggs per clutch the eggs are laid over a period of 1 to 2 days citation needed The female alone displays a brood patch The chicks may be heard peeping in the hours before they hatch Once the chicks have broken out of the shells the removal of the debris is necessary in order to avoid predators The mother may carry the eggshells to another location or consume a portion of them Once hatched the nestlings are active and have their eyes fully or half open additionally they display a sparing cover of soft down feathers The chicks are semi precocial By day 2 the hatchlings bodily mass will double and they will be able to self propel towards their mother s call The young will hiss at an intruder The young are fed by regurgitation before sunrise and after sunset The male parent assists in feeding fledglings and will also feed the female during nesting No records exist to support a parent s ability to physically carry a chick On their 18th day the young will make their first flight by days 25 30 they are flying proficiently The young are last seen with their parents on day 30 Complete development is shown between their 45 50th day At day 52 the juvenile will join the flock potentially migrating Juvenile birds in both sexes are lighter in colour and have a smaller white wing patch than adult common nighthawks 4 Predators edit Like other members of the caprimulgid clan the nighthawk s ground nesting habits endanger eggs and nestlings to predation by ground carnivores such as skunks raccoons and opossums 21 Confirmed predation on adults is restricted to domestic cats golden eagles and great horned owls 22 Peregrine falcons have also been confirmed to attack nighthawks as prey although the one recorded predation attempt was unsuccessful 23 Other suspected predators are likely to attack them such as dogs coyotes foxes hawks American kestrels 24 owls crows and ravens and snakes 25 Status and conservation editThere has been a general decline in the number of common nighthawks in North America but some population increases also have occurred 4 in other geographical locations 13 The bird s large range makes individual risk thresholds in specific regions difficult to establish 1 In Ontario the common nighthawk is rated as a species of special concern 26 The Common nighthawk s trait of being a ground nesting bird makes it particularly susceptible to predators some of which include domestic cats ravens snakes dogs coyotes falcons and owls Lack of flat roofs pesticides 4 increased predation and loss of habitat 13 are noted factors of their decline Further unstudied potential causes of decline include climate change disease road kills man made towers posing aerial hazards and parasites 4 The absence of flat roofs made with gravel in urban settings is an important cause of decline In an effort to provide managed breeding areas gravel pads have been added in the corners of rubberized roofs this proves acceptable as nesting has been observed 13 References edit a b BirdLife International 2016 Chordeiles minor IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22689714A93244252 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22689714A93244252 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Chordeiles minor Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 25 May 2010 a b c d e f g Sibley David Allen 2001 The Sibley Guide to Bird Life amp Behaviour Chanticleer Press Inc 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 Poulin R Grindal S Brigham R 1996 Common Nighthawk no 213 The Birds of North America The American Ornithologists Union a b c d e f g h i j k l The Birds of Manitoba Manitoba Avian Research Committee Manitoba Naturalists Society 2003 ISBN 9780969728016 a b c d e f g h i Elphick J ed 2007 Atlas of Bird Migration Firefly Books ISBN 978 1554079711 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 104 256 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Nighthawk Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required NE Nebraska introduction netstate com Capace Nancy Jan 1 1999 Encyclopedia of Nebraska Somerset Publishers Inc pp 2 3 U S Boston MA D Lothrop Company 1890 p 77 An index to the United States of America Historical geographical and political A handbook of reference combining the curious in U S history Gill F Donsker D eds 2014 IOC World Bird List 4 4 ed doi 10 14344 IOC ML 4 4 Retrieved 15 November 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Holyoak D T 2001 Nightjars and their Allies the Caprimulgiformes Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 854987 3 Common Nighthawk mountainnature com Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Farrell Claire E Wilson Scott Mitchell Greg 2017 Assessing the relative use of clearcuts burned stands and wetlands as breeding habitat for two declining aerial insectivores in the boreal forest Forest Ecology and Management 386 62 70 doi 10 1016 j foreco 2016 11 026 Sounds allaboutbirds org Common Nighthawk Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology a b Todd L Danielle Poulin Ray G Brigham R Mark 1998 Diet of Common Nighthawks Chordeiles minor Caprimulgidae Relative to Prey Abundance American Midland Naturalist 139 1 20 28 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 1998 139 0020 DOCNCM 2 0 CO 2 Brigham R M Fenton M B Aldridge H D J N 1998 Flight speed of foraging Common Nighthawks Chordeiles minor Does the measurement technique matter American Midland Naturalist 139 2 325 330 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 1998 139 0325 fsofcn 2 0 co 2 JSTOR 2426689 S2CID 86113224 Canevari M Canevari P Carrizo G Harris G Mata J Straneck R 1991 Nueva guia de las aves Argentinas New Guide to the Birds of Argentina in Spanish Buenos Aires Fundacion Acindar cited in Poulin Grindal amp Brigham 1996 4 Gillette L 1991 Survey of common nighthawks in Minnesota 1990 The Loon 62 141 143 cited in Birds of Manitoba 2003 p 238 5 238 Kantrud H A Higgins K F 1992 Nest and nest site characteristics of some groundnesting nonpasserine birds of northern grasslands Prairie Naturalist 24 67 84 Olendorff R R 1976 The food habits of North American golden eagles American Midland Naturalist 95 1 231 236 doi 10 2307 2424254 JSTOR 2424254 Bennett G 1987 A vellication of nighthawks Birdfinding in Canada 7 16 Gross A O 1940 Bent A C ed Eastern Nighthawk U S Natl Mus Bull Life histories of North American cuckoos goatsuckers hummingbirds and their allies 176 206 234 Marzilli V 1989 Up on the roof Maine Fish and Wildlife 31 25 29 Common nighthawk Government of Ontario September 10 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chordeiles minor nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Chordeiles minor BirdLife species factsheet for Chordeiles minor Chordeiles minor Avibase nbsp Common nighthawk media Internet Bird Collection Common nighthawk photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Interactive range map of Chordeiles minor at IUCN Red List maps Common nighthawk species account Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology Audio recordings of Common nighthawk on Xeno canto Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Common nighthawk amp oldid 1208449934, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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