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Falcon

Falcons (/ˈfɒlkən, ˈfɔːl-, ˈfæl-/) are birds of prey in the genus Falco, which includes about 40 species. Falcons are widely distributed on all continents of the world except Antarctica, though closely related raptors did occur there in the Eocene.[1]

Falcon
Temporal range: Late Miocene to present
Brown falcon (Falco berigora) in Victoria, Australia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Falconidae
Subfamily: Falconinae
Genus: Falco
Linnaeus, 1758
Type species
Falco subbuteo (Eurasian hobby)
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

38; see text.

Synonyms

Adult falcons have thin, tapered wings, which enable them to fly at high speed and change direction rapidly. Fledgling falcons, in their first year of flying, have longer flight feathers, which make their configuration more like that of a general-purpose bird such as a broad wing. This makes flying easier while learning the exceptional skills required to be effective hunters as adults.

The falcons are the largest genus in the Falconinae subfamily of Falconidae, which itself also includes another subfamily comprising caracaras and a few other species. All these birds kill with their beaks, using a tomial "tooth" on the side of their beaks—unlike the hawks, eagles, and other birds of prey in the Accipitridae, which use their feet.

The largest falcon is the gyrfalcon at up to 65 cm in length. The smallest falcon species is the Pygmy falcon which measures just 20 cm. As with hawks and owls, falcons exhibit sexual dimorphism, with the females typically larger than the males, thus allowing a wider range of prey species.[2]

Some small falcons with long, narrow wings are called "hobbies"[3] and some which hover while hunting are called "kestrels".[3][4]

As is the case with many birds of prey, falcons have exceptional powers of vision; the visual acuity of one species has been measured at 2.6 times that of a normal human.[5] Peregrine falcons have been recorded diving at speeds of 320 km/h (200 mph), making them the fastest-moving creatures on Earth; the fastest recorded dive attained a vertical speed of 390 km/h (240 mph).[6]

Taxonomy

The genus Falco was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae.[7] The type species is the Merlin (Falco columbarius).[8] The genus name Falco is Late Latin meaning a "falcon" from falx, falcis, meaning "a sickle", referring to the claws of the bird.[9][10] In Middle English and Old French, the title faucon refers generically to several captive raptor species.[11]

The traditional term for a male falcon is tercel (British spelling) or tiercel (American spelling), from the Latin tertius (third) because of the belief that only one in three eggs hatched a male bird. Some sources give the etymology as deriving from the fact that a male falcon is about one-third smaller than a female[12][13][14] (Old French: tiercelet). A falcon chick, especially one reared for falconry, still in its downy stage, is known as an eyas[15][16] (sometimes spelled eyass). The word arose by mistaken division of Old French un niais, from Latin presumed nidiscus (nestling) from nidus (nest). The technique of hunting with trained captive birds of prey is known as falconry.

Compared to other birds of prey, the fossil record of the falcons is not well distributed in time. The oldest fossils tentatively assigned to this genus are from the Late Miocene, less than 10 million years ago.[citation needed] This coincides with a period in which many modern genera of birds became recognizable in the fossil record. The falcon lineage may, however, be somewhat older than this,[citation needed] and given the distribution of fossil and living Falco taxa, is probably of North American, African, or possibly Middle Eastern or European origin. Falcons are not closely related to other birds of prey, and their nearest relatives are parrots and songbirds.[17]

Overview

Falcons are roughly divisible into three or four groups. The first contains the kestrels (probably excepting the American kestrel);[11] usually small and stocky falcons of mainly brown upperside colour and sometimes sexually dimorphic; three African species that are generally gray in colour stand apart from the typical members of this group. The fox and greater kestrels can be told apart at first glance by their tail colours, but not by much else; they might be very close relatives and are probably much closer to each other than the lesser and common kestrels. Kestrels feed chiefly on terrestrial vertebrates and invertebrates of appropriate size, such as rodents, reptiles, or insects.

The second group contains slightly larger (on average) species, the hobbies and relatives. These birds are characterized by considerable amounts of dark slate-gray in their plumage; their malar areas are nearly always black. They feed mainly on smaller birds.

Third are the peregrine falcon and its relatives, variably sized powerful birds that also have a black malar area (except some very light color morphs), and often a black cap, as well. They are very fast birds with a maximum speed of 390 kilometres per hour. Otherwise, they are somewhat intermediate between the other groups, being chiefly medium grey with some lighter or brownish colours on their upper sides. They are, on average, more delicately patterned than the hobbies and, if the hierofalcons are excluded (see below), this group typically contains species with horizontal barring on their undersides. As opposed to the other groups, where tail colour varies much in general but little according to evolutionary relatedness,[note 1] the tails of the large falcons are quite uniformly dark grey with inconspicuous black banding and small, white tips, though this is probably plesiomorphic. These large Falco species feed on mid-sized birds and terrestrial vertebrates.

Very similar to these, and sometimes included therein, are the four or so species of hierofalcons (literally, "hawk-falcons"). They represent taxa with, usually, more phaeomelanins, which impart reddish or brown colors, and generally more strongly patterned plumage reminiscent of hawks. Their undersides have a lengthwise pattern of blotches, lines, or arrowhead marks.

While these three or four groups, loosely circumscribed, are an informal arrangement, they probably contain several distinct clades in their entirety.

A study of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data of some kestrels[11] identified a clade containing the common kestrel and related "malar-striped" species, to the exclusion of such taxa as the greater kestrel (which lacks a malar stripe), the lesser kestrel (which is very similar to the common, but also has no malar stripe), and the American kestrel, which has a malar stripe, but its colour pattern – apart from the brownish back – and also the black feathers behind the ear, which never occur in the true kestrels, are more reminiscent of some hobbies. The malar-striped kestrels apparently split from their relatives in the Gelasian, roughly 2.0–2.5 million years ago (Mya), and are seemingly of tropical East African origin. The entire "true kestrel" group—excluding the American species—is probably a distinct and quite young clade, as also suggested by their numerous apomorphies.

 
Most members of the genus Falco show a "tooth" on the upper mandible

Other studies[18][19][20][21][22] have confirmed that the hierofalcons are a monophyletic group–and that hybridization is quite frequent at least in the larger falcon species. Initial studies of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data suggested that the hierofalcons are basal among living falcons.[18][19] The discovery of a NUMT proved this earlier theory erroneous.[20] In reality, the hierofalcons are a rather young group, originating at the same time as the start of the main kestrel radiation, about 2 Mya. Very little fossil history exists for this lineage. However, the present diversity of very recent origin suggests that this lineage may have nearly gone extinct in the recent past.[22][23]

The phylogeny and delimitations of the peregrine and hobby groups are more problematic. Molecular studies have only been conducted on a few species, and the morphologically ambiguous taxa have often been little researched. The morphology of the syrinx, which contributes well to resolving the overall phylogeny of the Falconidae,[24][25] is not very informative in the present genus. Nonetheless, a core group containing the peregrine and Barbary falcons, which, in turn, group with the hierofalcons and the more distant prairie falcon (which was sometimes placed with the hierofalcons, though it is entirely distinct biogeographically), as well as at least most of the "typical" hobbies, are confirmed to be monophyletic as suspected.[18][19]

Given that the American Falco species of today belong to the peregrine group, or are apparently more basal species, the initially most successful evolutionary radiation seemingly was a Holarctic one that originated possibly around central Eurasia or in (northern) Africa. One or several lineages were present in North America by the Early Pliocene at latest.

The origin of today's major Falco groups—the "typical" hobbies and kestrels, for example, or the peregrine-hierofalcon complex, or the aplomado falcon lineage—can be quite confidently placed from the Miocene-Pliocene boundary through the Zanclean and Piacenzian and just into the Gelasian, that is from 2.4 to 5.3 Mya, when the malar-striped kestrels diversified. Some groups of falcons, such as the hierofalcon complex and the peregrine-Barbary superspecies, have only evolved in more recent times; the species of the former seem to be 120,000 years old or so.[22]

Species

The sequence follows the taxonomic order of White et al. (1996),[26] except for adjustments in the kestrel sequence.

Image Common name Scientific name Distribution
  Malagasy kestrel Falco newtoni Madagascar, Mayotte, and the Comores.
  Seychelles kestrel Falco araeus Seychelles Islands
  Mauritius kestrel Falco punctatus Mauritius
  Spotted kestrel Falco moluccensis Wallacea and Java.
  Nankeen kestrel or Australian kestrel Falco cenchroides Australia and New Guinea.
  Common kestrel Falco tinnunculus Widespread in Europe, Asia, and Africa, as well as occasionally reaching the east coast of North America.
  Rock kestrel Falco rupicolus Northwestern Angola and southern Democratic Republic of Congo to southern Tanzania, and south to South Africa.
  Greater kestrel Falco rupicoloides Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, parts of Angola and Zambia and in much of South Africa.
  Fox kestrel Falco alopex South of the Sahara from Mali eastwards as far as Ethiopia and north-west Kenya. It occasionally wanders west to Senegal, the Gambia and Guinea and south to the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
  Lesser kestrel Falco naumanni Mediterranean across Central Asia into China and Mongolia.
  Grey kestrel Falco ardosiaceus Ethiopia, western parts of Kenya and Tanzania.
  Dickinson's kestrel Falco dickinsoni Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi along with north-eastern South Africa.
  Banded kestrel Falco zoniventris Madagascar
  Red-necked falcon Falco chicquera Africa, India
  Red-footed falcon Falco vespertinus Russia, Ukraine and bordering regions.
  Amur falcon Falco amurensis South-eastern Siberia and Northern China.
  Eleonora's falcon Falco eleonorae Greece, Cyprus, the Canary Islands, Ibiza and off Spain, Italy, Croatia, Morocco and Algeria.
  Sooty falcon Falco concolor Northeastern Africa to the southern Persian Gulf region.
  American kestrel or "sparrow hawk" Falco sparverius Central and western Alaska across northern Canada to Nova Scotia, and south throughout North America, into central Mexico and the Caribbean.
  Aplomado falcon Falco femoralis Northern Mexico and Trinidad locally to southern South America.
  Merlin or "pigeon hawk" Falco columbarius Eurasia, North Africa, North America.
  Bat falcon Falco rufigularis Tropical Mexico, Central and South America, and Trinidad
  Orange-breasted falcon Falco deiroleucus Southern Mexico to northern Argentina.
  Eurasian hobby Falco subbuteo Africa, Europe and Asia.
  African hobby Falco cuvierii Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ivory Coast, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
  Oriental hobby Falco severus Eastern Himalayas and ranges southwards through Indochina to Australasia
  Australian hobby or little falcon Falco longipennis Australia
  New Zealand falcon or kārearea Falco novaeseelandiae New Zealand
  Brown falcon Falco berigora Australia and New Guinea.
  Grey falcon Falco hypoleucos Australia
  Black falcon Falco subniger Australia
  Lanner falcon Falco biarmicus Africa, southeast Europe and just into Asia.
  Laggar falcon Falco jugger Southeastern Iran, southeastern Afghanistan, Pakistan, through India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and northwestern Myanmar.
  Saker falcon Falco cherrug Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and China.
  Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus Eastern and western Greenland, Canada, Alaska, Iceland and Norway.
  Prairie falcon Falco mexicanus Western North America.
  Peregrine falcon Falco peregrinus Cosmopolitan
  Taita falcon Falco fasciinucha Kenya

Extinct species

Fossil record

  • Falco medius (Late Miocene of Cherevichnyi, Ukraine)[note 2][27][28]
  • ?Falco sp. (Late Miocene of Idaho)[29]
  • Falco sp. (Early[30] Pliocene of Kansas)[31]
  • Falco sp. (Early Pliocene of Bulgaria – Early Pleistocene of Spain and Czech Republic)[note 3]
  • Falco oregonus (Early/Middle Pliocene of Fossil Lake, Oregon) – possibly not distinct from a living species
  • Falco umanskajae (Late Pliocene of Kryzhanovka, Ukraine) – includes "Falco odessanus", a nomen nudum[32]
  • ?Falco bakalovi (Late Pliocene of Varshets, Bulgaria)[33][34]
  • Falco antiquus (Middle Pleistocene of Noailles, France and possibly Horvőlgy, Hungary)[note 4][22]
  • Cuban kestrel, Falco kurochkini (Late Pleistocene/Holocene of Cuba, West Indies)
  • Falco chowi (China)
  • Falco bulgaricus (Late Miocene of Hadzhidimovo, Bulgaria)[35]

Several more paleosubspecies of extant species also been described; see species accounts for these.

"Sushkinia" pliocaena from the Early Pliocene of Pavlodar (Kazakhstan) appears to be a falcon of some sort. It might belong in this genus or a closely related one.[27] In any case, the genus name Sushkinia is invalid for this animal because it had already been allocated to a prehistoric dragonfly relative. In 2015 the bird genus was renamed Psushkinia.[36]

The supposed "Falco" pisanus was actually a pigeon of the genus Columba, possibly the same as Columba omnisanctorum, which, in that case, would adopt the older species name of the "falcon".[28] The Eocene fossil "Falco" falconellus (or "F." falconella) from Wyoming is a bird of uncertain affiliations, maybe a falconid, maybe not; it certainly does not belong in this genus. "Falco" readei is now considered a paleosubspecies of the yellow-headed caracara (Milvago chimachima).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For example, tail colour in the common and lesser kestrels is absolutely identical, yet they do not seem closely related.
  2. ^ IZAN 45-4033: left carpometacarpus. Small species; possibly closer to kestrels than to peregrine lineage or hierofalcons, but may be more basal altogether due to its age
  3. ^ A hierofalcon (Mlíkovský 2002)? If so, probably not close to the living species, but an earlier divergence that left no descendants; might be more than one species due to large range in time and/or include common ancestor of hierofalcons and peregrine-Barbary complex (Nittinger et al. 2005).
  4. ^ Supposedly a saker falcon paleosubspecies (Mlíkovský 2002), but this is not too likely due to the probable Eemian origin of that species.

References

  1. ^ Cenizo, Marcos; Noriega, Jorge I.; Reguero, Marcelo A. (2016). "A stem falconid bird from the Lower Eocene of Antarctica and the early southern radiation of the falcons". Journal of Ornithology. 157 (3): 885. doi:10.1007/s10336-015-1316-0. S2CID 15517037.
  2. ^ Krüger, Oliver (2005). "The Evolution of Reversed Sexual Dimorphism in Hawks, Falcons and Owls: a comparative study". Evolutionary Ecology. 19 (5): 467–486. doi:10.1007/s10682-005-0293-9. S2CID 22181702.
  3. ^ a b Oberprieler, Ulrich; Cillié, Burger (2009). The raptor guide of Southern Africa. Game Parks Publishing. ISBN 9780620432238.
  4. ^ Sale, Richard (28 July 2016). Falcons (Collins New Naturalist Library, Book 132). HarperCollins UK. ISBN 9780007511433.
  5. ^ Fox, R; Lehmkuhle, S.; Westendorf, D. (1976). "Falcon visual acuity". Science. 192 (4236): 263–65. Bibcode:1976Sci...192..263F. doi:10.1126/science.1257767. PMID 1257767.
  6. ^ "The Speed of Animals" in The New Book of Knowledge. Grolier Academic Reference. 2003. p. 278. ISBN 071720538X
  7. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1758). Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (in Latin). Vol. 1 (10th ed.). Holmiae (Stockholm): Laurentii Salvii. p. 88.
  8. ^ Dickinson, E.C.; Remsen, J.V. Jr., eds. (2013). The Howard & Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the World. Vol. 1: Non-passerines (4th ed.). Eastbourne, UK: Aves Press. p. 349. ISBN 978-0-9568611-0-8.
  9. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. p. 63. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  10. ^ Shorter Oxford English dictionary on historical principles. Stevenson, Angus., Brown, Lesley. (6th. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2007. ISBN 9780199206872. OCLC 170973920.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  11. ^ a b c Groombridge, Jim J.; Jones, Carl G.; Bayes, Michelle K.; van Zyl, Anthony J.; Carrillo, José; Nichols, Richard A.; Bruford, Michael W. (2002). "A molecular phylogeny of African kestrels with reference to divergence across the Indian Ocean". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 25 (2): 267–77. doi:10.1016/S1055-7903(02)00254-3. PMID 12414309.
  12. ^ Harper, Douglas. "tercel". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  13. ^ "tercel". Dictionary.reference.com. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  14. ^ "tercel", Oxford Dictionary
  15. ^ "eyas". Thefreedictionary.com. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  16. ^ . Tiscali.co.uk. 21 September 1964. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  17. ^ Suh A, Paus M, Kiefmann M, et al. (2011). "Mesozoic retroposons reveal parrots as the closest living relatives of passerine birds". Nature Communications. 2 (8): 443–8. Bibcode:2011NatCo...2..443S. doi:10.1038/ncomms1448. PMC 3265382. PMID 21863010.
  18. ^ a b c Helbig, A.J.; Seibold, I.; Bednarek, W.; Brüning, H.; Gaucher, P.; Ristow, D.; Scharlau, W.; Schmidl, D. & Wink, Michael (1994): Phylogenetic relationships among falcon species (genus Falco) according to DNA sequence variation of the cytochrome b gene. In: Meyburg, B.-U. & Chancellor, R.D. (eds.): Raptor conservation today: pp. 593–99
  19. ^ a b c Wink, Michael; Seibold, I.; Lotfikhah, F. & Bednarek, W. (1998): Molecular systematics of holarctic raptors (Order Falconiformes). In: Chancellor, R.D., Meyburg, B.-U. & Ferrero, J.J. (eds.): Holarctic Birds of Prey: 29–48. Adenex & WWGBP
  20. ^ a b Wink, Michael & Sauer-Gürth, Hedi (2000): Advances in the molecular systematics of African raptors. In: Chancellor, R.D. & Meyburg, B.-U. (eds): Raptors at Risk: 135–47. WWGBP/Hancock House, Berlin/Blaine.
  21. ^ Wink, Michael; Sauer-Gürth, Hedi; Ellis, David & Kenward, Robert (2004): Phylogenetic relationships in the Hierofalco complex (Saker-, Gyr-, Lanner-, Laggar Falcon). In: Chancellor, R.D. & Meyburg, B.-U. (eds.): Raptors Worldwide: 499–504. WWGBP, Berlin
  22. ^ a b c d Nittinger, F.; Haring, E.; Pinsker, W.; Wink, Michael; Gamauf, A. (2005). "Out of Africa? Phylogenetic relationships between Falco biarmicus and other hierofalcons (Aves Falconidae)" (PDF). Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. 43 (4): 321–31. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0469.2005.00326.x.
  23. ^ Johnson, J.A.; Burnham, K.K.; Burnham, W.A.; Mindell, D.P. (2007). "Genetic structure among continental and island populations of gyrfalcons" (PDF). Molecular Ecology. 16 (15): 3145–60. doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03373.x. hdl:2027.42/71471. PMID 17651193. S2CID 17437176.
  24. ^ Griffiths, Carole S. (1999). "Phylogeny of the Falconidae inferred from molecular and morphological data" (PDF). Auk. 116 (1): 116–30. doi:10.2307/4089459. JSTOR 4089459.
  25. ^ Griffiths, Carole S.; Barrowclough, George F.; Groth, Jeff G.; Mertz, Lisa (2004). "Phylogeny of the Falconidae (Aves): a comparison of the efficacy of morphological, mitochondrial, and nuclear data". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 32 (1): 101–09. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2003.11.019. PMID 15186800.
  26. ^ White, Clayton M.; Olsen, Penny D. & Kiff, Lloyd F. (1994): Family Falconidae. In: del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew & Sargatal, Jordi (editors): Handbook of Birds of the World, Volume 2 (New World Vultures to Guineafowl): 216–75, plates 24–28. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-15-6
  27. ^ a b Becker, Jonathan J. (1987). "Revision of "Falco" ramenta Wetmore and the Neogene evolution of the Falconidae" (PDF). Auk. 104 (2): 270–76. doi:10.1093/auk/104.2.270. JSTOR 4087033.
  28. ^ a b Mlíkovský, Jirí (2002): Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe 20 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Ninox Press, Prague
  29. ^ IMNH 27937. A coracoid of a merlin-sized species. It does not seem close to F. columbarius or the Recent North American species (Becker 1987).
  30. ^ Fox Canyon Local Fauna, 4.3–4.8 million years ago: Martin, R.A.; Honey, J.G. & Pelaez-Campomanes, P. (2000): The Meade Basin Rodent Project; a progress report. Kansas Geological Survey Open-file Report 2000-61. Paludicola 3(1): 1–32.
  31. ^ UMMP V27159, V29107, V57508-V57510, V57513/V57514[verification needed] some limb bones. Slightly smaller than a merlin and more robust than American kestrel, and seems not too distant from F. columbarius. Feduccia, J. Alan; Ford, Norman L. (1970). "Some birds of prey from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas" (PDF). Auk. 87 (4): 795–97. doi:10.2307/4083714. JSTOR 4083714.
  32. ^ NNPM NAN 41-646. Almost complete left tarsometatarsus. Probably a prehistoric hobby, perhaps less specialized for bird hunting: Sobolev, D.V. (2003): Новый вид плиоценового сокола (Falconiformes, Falconidae) [A new species of Pliocene falcon (Falconiformes, Falconidae)] Vestnik zoologii 37 (6): 85–87. [Russian with English abstract]
  33. ^ Boev, Z. 1999. Falco bakalovi sp. n. – a Late Pliocene falcon (Falconidae, Aves) from Varshets (W Bulgaria). – Geologica Balcanica, 29 (1–2): 131–35.
  34. ^ Boev, Z. 2011. New fossil record of the Late Pliocene kestrel (Falco bakalovi Boev, 1999) from the type locality in Bulgaria. – Geologica Balcanica, 40 (1–3): 13–30.
  35. ^ Boev, Z. 2011. Falco bulgaricus sp. n. (Aves, Falconiformes) from the Middle Miocene of Hadzhidimovo (SW Bulgaria). – Acta zoologica bulgarica, 63 (1): 17–35.
  36. ^ Nikita V. Zelenkov; Evgeny N. Kurochkin (2015). "КЛАСС AVES". In E.N. Kurochkin; A.V. Lopatin; N.V. Zelenkov. Ископаемые позвоночные России и сопредельных стран. Ископаемые рептилии и птицы. Часть 3 / Fossil vertebrates of Russia and adjacent countries. Fossil Reptiles and Birds. Part 3. GEOS. pp. 86–290. ISBN 978-5-89118-699-6.

Further reading

  • Fuchs, J.; Johnson, J.A.; Mindell, D.P. (2015). "Rapid diversification of falcons (Aves: Falconidae) due to expansion of open habitats in the Late Miocene". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 82: 166–182. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2014.08.010. PMID 25256056.

External links

  • Falconidae videos on the Internet Bird Collection, ibc.lynxeds.com
  • The Raptor Resource Project – Peregrine, owl, eagle and osprey cams, facts, and other resources, raptorresource.org
  • "Falcon" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

falcon, other, uses, disambiguation, disambiguation, ɔː, birds, prey, genus, falco, which, includes, about, species, widely, distributed, continents, world, except, antarctica, though, closely, related, raptors, occur, there, eocene, temporal, range, late, mio. For other uses see Falcon disambiguation and Falcons disambiguation Falcons ˈ f ɒ l k en ˈ f ɔː l ˈ f ae l are birds of prey in the genus Falco which includes about 40 species Falcons are widely distributed on all continents of the world except Antarctica though closely related raptors did occur there in the Eocene 1 FalconTemporal range Late Miocene to presentBrown falcon Falco berigora in Victoria AustraliaScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder FalconiformesFamily FalconidaeSubfamily FalconinaeGenus FalcoLinnaeus 1758Type speciesFalco subbuteo Eurasian hobby Linnaeus 1758Species38 see text SynonymsAesalon Lithofalco Tinnunculus Linnaeus 1766 Hierofalco Cuvier 1817 Cerchneis Boie 1826 Hypotriorchis Boie 1826 Rhynchodon Nitzsch 1829 Ieracidea Gould 1838 Hieracidea Strickland 1841 unjustified emendation verification needed Gennaia Kaup 1847 Jerafalco Kaup 1850 unjustified emendation Harpe Bonaparte 1855 non Lacepede 1802 verification needed preoccupied Dissodectes Sclater 1864 Genaie Heuglin 1867 unjustified emendation verification needed Harpa Sharpe 1874 non Pallas 1774 preoccupied Gennadas Heine amp Reichenow 1890 verification needed unjustified emendation verification needed Nesierax Oberholser 1899 Nesihierax Dubois 1902 unjustified emendation Asturaetus De Vis 1906 non Asturaetos Brehm 1855 preoccupied Plioaetus Richmond 1908 Sushkinia Tugarinov 1935 non Martynov 1930 preoccupied see belowAdult falcons have thin tapered wings which enable them to fly at high speed and change direction rapidly Fledgling falcons in their first year of flying have longer flight feathers which make their configuration more like that of a general purpose bird such as a broad wing This makes flying easier while learning the exceptional skills required to be effective hunters as adults The falcons are the largest genus in the Falconinae subfamily of Falconidae which itself also includes another subfamily comprising caracaras and a few other species All these birds kill with their beaks using a tomial tooth on the side of their beaks unlike the hawks eagles and other birds of prey in the Accipitridae which use their feet The largest falcon is the gyrfalcon at up to 65 cm in length The smallest falcon species is the Pygmy falcon which measures just 20 cm As with hawks and owls falcons exhibit sexual dimorphism with the females typically larger than the males thus allowing a wider range of prey species 2 Some small falcons with long narrow wings are called hobbies 3 and some which hover while hunting are called kestrels 3 4 As is the case with many birds of prey falcons have exceptional powers of vision the visual acuity of one species has been measured at 2 6 times that of a normal human 5 Peregrine falcons have been recorded diving at speeds of 320 km h 200 mph making them the fastest moving creatures on Earth the fastest recorded dive attained a vertical speed of 390 km h 240 mph 6 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Overview 1 2 Species 1 3 Extinct species 1 4 Fossil record 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksTaxonomy EditThe genus Falco was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae 7 The type species is the Merlin Falco columbarius 8 The genus name Falco is Late Latin meaning a falcon from falx falcis meaning a sickle referring to the claws of the bird 9 10 In Middle English and Old French the title faucon refers generically to several captive raptor species 11 The traditional term for a male falcon is tercel British spelling or tiercel American spelling from the Latin tertius third because of the belief that only one in three eggs hatched a male bird Some sources give the etymology as deriving from the fact that a male falcon is about one third smaller than a female 12 13 14 Old French tiercelet A falcon chick especially one reared for falconry still in its downy stage is known as an eyas 15 16 sometimes spelled eyass The word arose by mistaken division of Old French un niais from Latin presumed nidiscus nestling from nidus nest The technique of hunting with trained captive birds of prey is known as falconry Compared to other birds of prey the fossil record of the falcons is not well distributed in time The oldest fossils tentatively assigned to this genus are from the Late Miocene less than 10 million years ago citation needed This coincides with a period in which many modern genera of birds became recognizable in the fossil record The falcon lineage may however be somewhat older than this citation needed and given the distribution of fossil and living Falco taxa is probably of North American African or possibly Middle Eastern or European origin Falcons are not closely related to other birds of prey and their nearest relatives are parrots and songbirds 17 Overview Edit Falcons are roughly divisible into three or four groups The first contains the kestrels probably excepting the American kestrel 11 usually small and stocky falcons of mainly brown upperside colour and sometimes sexually dimorphic three African species that are generally gray in colour stand apart from the typical members of this group The fox and greater kestrels can be told apart at first glance by their tail colours but not by much else they might be very close relatives and are probably much closer to each other than the lesser and common kestrels Kestrels feed chiefly on terrestrial vertebrates and invertebrates of appropriate size such as rodents reptiles or insects The second group contains slightly larger on average species the hobbies and relatives These birds are characterized by considerable amounts of dark slate gray in their plumage their malar areas are nearly always black They feed mainly on smaller birds Third are the peregrine falcon and its relatives variably sized powerful birds that also have a black malar area except some very light color morphs and often a black cap as well They are very fast birds with a maximum speed of 390 kilometres per hour Otherwise they are somewhat intermediate between the other groups being chiefly medium grey with some lighter or brownish colours on their upper sides They are on average more delicately patterned than the hobbies and if the hierofalcons are excluded see below this group typically contains species with horizontal barring on their undersides As opposed to the other groups where tail colour varies much in general but little according to evolutionary relatedness note 1 the tails of the large falcons are quite uniformly dark grey with inconspicuous black banding and small white tips though this is probably plesiomorphic These large Falco species feed on mid sized birds and terrestrial vertebrates Very similar to these and sometimes included therein are the four or so species of hierofalcons literally hawk falcons They represent taxa with usually more phaeomelanins which impart reddish or brown colors and generally more strongly patterned plumage reminiscent of hawks Their undersides have a lengthwise pattern of blotches lines or arrowhead marks While these three or four groups loosely circumscribed are an informal arrangement they probably contain several distinct clades in their entirety A study of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data of some kestrels 11 identified a clade containing the common kestrel and related malar striped species to the exclusion of such taxa as the greater kestrel which lacks a malar stripe the lesser kestrel which is very similar to the common but also has no malar stripe and the American kestrel which has a malar stripe but its colour pattern apart from the brownish back and also the black feathers behind the ear which never occur in the true kestrels are more reminiscent of some hobbies The malar striped kestrels apparently split from their relatives in the Gelasian roughly 2 0 2 5 million years ago Mya and are seemingly of tropical East African origin The entire true kestrel group excluding the American species is probably a distinct and quite young clade as also suggested by their numerous apomorphies Most members of the genus Falco show a tooth on the upper mandible Other studies 18 19 20 21 22 have confirmed that the hierofalcons are a monophyletic group and that hybridization is quite frequent at least in the larger falcon species Initial studies of mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data suggested that the hierofalcons are basal among living falcons 18 19 The discovery of a NUMT proved this earlier theory erroneous 20 In reality the hierofalcons are a rather young group originating at the same time as the start of the main kestrel radiation about 2 Mya Very little fossil history exists for this lineage However the present diversity of very recent origin suggests that this lineage may have nearly gone extinct in the recent past 22 23 The phylogeny and delimitations of the peregrine and hobby groups are more problematic Molecular studies have only been conducted on a few species and the morphologically ambiguous taxa have often been little researched The morphology of the syrinx which contributes well to resolving the overall phylogeny of the Falconidae 24 25 is not very informative in the present genus Nonetheless a core group containing the peregrine and Barbary falcons which in turn group with the hierofalcons and the more distant prairie falcon which was sometimes placed with the hierofalcons though it is entirely distinct biogeographically as well as at least most of the typical hobbies are confirmed to be monophyletic as suspected 18 19 Given that the American Falco species of today belong to the peregrine group or are apparently more basal species the initially most successful evolutionary radiation seemingly was a Holarctic one that originated possibly around central Eurasia or in northern Africa One or several lineages were present in North America by the Early Pliocene at latest The origin of today s major Falco groups the typical hobbies and kestrels for example or the peregrine hierofalcon complex or the aplomado falcon lineage can be quite confidently placed from the Miocene Pliocene boundary through the Zanclean and Piacenzian and just into the Gelasian that is from 2 4 to 5 3 Mya when the malar striped kestrels diversified Some groups of falcons such as the hierofalcon complex and the peregrine Barbary superspecies have only evolved in more recent times the species of the former seem to be 120 000 years old or so 22 Species Edit The sequence follows the taxonomic order of White et al 1996 26 except for adjustments in the kestrel sequence Image Common name Scientific name Distribution Malagasy kestrel Falco newtoni Madagascar Mayotte and the Comores Seychelles kestrel Falco araeus Seychelles Islands Mauritius kestrel Falco punctatus Mauritius Spotted kestrel Falco moluccensis Wallacea and Java Nankeen kestrel or Australian kestrel Falco cenchroides Australia and New Guinea Common kestrel Falco tinnunculus Widespread in Europe Asia and Africa as well as occasionally reaching the east coast of North America Rock kestrel Falco rupicolus Northwestern Angola and southern Democratic Republic of Congo to southern Tanzania and south to South Africa Greater kestrel Falco rupicoloides Namibia Botswana Zimbabwe parts of Angola and Zambia and in much of South Africa Fox kestrel Falco alopex South of the Sahara from Mali eastwards as far as Ethiopia and north west Kenya It occasionally wanders west to Senegal the Gambia and Guinea and south to the Democratic Republic of the Congo Lesser kestrel Falco naumanni Mediterranean across Central Asia into China and Mongolia Grey kestrel Falco ardosiaceus Ethiopia western parts of Kenya and Tanzania Dickinson s kestrel Falco dickinsoni Mozambique Zimbabwe Zambia and Malawi along with north eastern South Africa Banded kestrel Falco zoniventris Madagascar Red necked falcon Falco chicquera Africa India Red footed falcon Falco vespertinus Russia Ukraine and bordering regions Amur falcon Falco amurensis South eastern Siberia and Northern China Eleonora s falcon Falco eleonorae Greece Cyprus the Canary Islands Ibiza and off Spain Italy Croatia Morocco and Algeria Sooty falcon Falco concolor Northeastern Africa to the southern Persian Gulf region American kestrel or sparrow hawk Falco sparverius Central and western Alaska across northern Canada to Nova Scotia and south throughout North America into central Mexico and the Caribbean Aplomado falcon Falco femoralis Northern Mexico and Trinidad locally to southern South America Merlin or pigeon hawk Falco columbarius Eurasia North Africa North America Bat falcon Falco rufigularis Tropical Mexico Central and South America and Trinidad Orange breasted falcon Falco deiroleucus Southern Mexico to northern Argentina Eurasian hobby Falco subbuteo Africa Europe and Asia African hobby Falco cuvierii Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Central African Republic Chad Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo Ivory Coast Eswatini Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Kenya Liberia Malawi Mali Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Tanzania Togo Uganda Zambia and Zimbabwe Oriental hobby Falco severus Eastern Himalayas and ranges southwards through Indochina to Australasia Australian hobby or little falcon Falco longipennis Australia New Zealand falcon or karearea Falco novaeseelandiae New Zealand Brown falcon Falco berigora Australia and New Guinea Grey falcon Falco hypoleucos Australia Black falcon Falco subniger Australia Lanner falcon Falco biarmicus Africa southeast Europe and just into Asia Laggar falcon Falco jugger Southeastern Iran southeastern Afghanistan Pakistan through India Nepal Bhutan Bangladesh and northwestern Myanmar Saker falcon Falco cherrug Eastern Europe the Middle East Central Asia and China Gyrfalcon Falco rusticolus Eastern and western Greenland Canada Alaska Iceland and Norway Prairie falcon Falco mexicanus Western North America Peregrine falcon Falco peregrinus Cosmopolitan Taita falcon Falco fasciinucha KenyaExtinct species Edit Reunion kestrel Falco duboisi extinct about 1700 Fossil record Edit Falco medius Late Miocene of Cherevichnyi Ukraine note 2 27 28 Falco sp Late Miocene of Idaho 29 Falco sp Early 30 Pliocene of Kansas 31 Falco sp Early Pliocene of Bulgaria Early Pleistocene of Spain and Czech Republic note 3 Falco oregonus Early Middle Pliocene of Fossil Lake Oregon possibly not distinct from a living species Falco umanskajae Late Pliocene of Kryzhanovka Ukraine includes Falco odessanus a nomen nudum 32 Falco bakalovi Late Pliocene of Varshets Bulgaria 33 34 Falco antiquus Middle Pleistocene of Noailles France and possibly Horvolgy Hungary note 4 22 Cuban kestrel Falco kurochkini Late Pleistocene Holocene of Cuba West Indies Falco chowi China Falco bulgaricus Late Miocene of Hadzhidimovo Bulgaria 35 Several more paleosubspecies of extant species also been described see species accounts for these Sushkinia pliocaena from the Early Pliocene of Pavlodar Kazakhstan appears to be a falcon of some sort It might belong in this genus or a closely related one 27 In any case the genus name Sushkinia is invalid for this animal because it had already been allocated to a prehistoric dragonfly relative In 2015 the bird genus was renamed Psushkinia 36 The supposed Falco pisanus was actually a pigeon of the genus Columba possibly the same as Columba omnisanctorum which in that case would adopt the older species name of the falcon 28 The Eocene fossil Falco falconellus or F falconella from Wyoming is a bird of uncertain affiliations maybe a falconid maybe not it certainly does not belong in this genus Falco readei is now considered a paleosubspecies of the yellow headed caracara Milvago chimachima See also Edit Birds portalAbu Dhabi Falcon Hospital Falconry Ra Horus KhonsuNotes Edit For example tail colour in the common and lesser kestrels is absolutely identical yet they do not seem closely related IZAN 45 4033 left carpometacarpus Small species possibly closer to kestrels than to peregrine lineage or hierofalcons but may be more basal altogether due to its age A hierofalcon Mlikovsky 2002 If so probably not close to the living species but an earlier divergence that left no descendants might be more than one species due to large range in time and or include common ancestor of hierofalcons and peregrine Barbary complex Nittinger et al 2005 Supposedly a saker falcon paleosubspecies Mlikovsky 2002 but this is not too likely due to the probable Eemian origin of that species References Edit Cenizo Marcos Noriega Jorge I Reguero Marcelo A 2016 A stem falconid bird from the Lower Eocene of Antarctica and the early southern radiation of the falcons Journal of Ornithology 157 3 885 doi 10 1007 s10336 015 1316 0 S2CID 15517037 Kruger Oliver 2005 The Evolution of Reversed Sexual Dimorphism in Hawks Falcons and Owls a comparative study Evolutionary Ecology 19 5 467 486 doi 10 1007 s10682 005 0293 9 S2CID 22181702 a b Oberprieler Ulrich Cillie Burger 2009 The raptor guide of Southern Africa Game Parks Publishing ISBN 9780620432238 Sale Richard 28 July 2016 Falcons Collins New Naturalist Library Book 132 HarperCollins UK ISBN 9780007511433 Fox R Lehmkuhle S Westendorf D 1976 Falcon visual acuity Science 192 4236 263 65 Bibcode 1976Sci 192 263F doi 10 1126 science 1257767 PMID 1257767 The Speed of Animals in The New Book of Knowledge Grolier Academic Reference 2003 p 278 ISBN 071720538X Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 10th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 88 Dickinson E C Remsen J V Jr eds 2013 The Howard amp Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the World Vol 1 Non passerines 4th ed Eastbourne UK Aves Press p 349 ISBN 978 0 9568611 0 8 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm p 63 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Shorter Oxford English dictionary on historical principles Stevenson Angus Brown Lesley 6th ed Oxford Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 9780199206872 OCLC 170973920 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Groombridge Jim J Jones Carl G Bayes Michelle K van Zyl Anthony J Carrillo Jose Nichols Richard A Bruford Michael W 2002 A molecular phylogeny of African kestrels with reference to divergence across the Indian Ocean Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 25 2 267 77 doi 10 1016 S1055 7903 02 00254 3 PMID 12414309 Harper Douglas tercel Online Etymology Dictionary tercel Dictionary reference com Retrieved 20 March 2010 tercel Oxford Dictionary eyas Thefreedictionary com Retrieved 20 March 2010 Dictionary of Difficult Words eyas Tiscali co uk 21 September 1964 Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Suh A Paus M Kiefmann M et al 2011 Mesozoic retroposons reveal parrots as the closest living relatives of passerine birds Nature Communications 2 8 443 8 Bibcode 2011NatCo 2 443S doi 10 1038 ncomms1448 PMC 3265382 PMID 21863010 a b c Helbig A J Seibold I Bednarek W Bruning H Gaucher P Ristow D Scharlau W Schmidl D amp Wink Michael 1994 Phylogenetic relationships among falcon species genus Falco according to DNA sequence variation of the cytochrome b gene In Meyburg B U amp Chancellor R D eds Raptor conservation today pp 593 99 a b c Wink Michael Seibold I Lotfikhah F amp Bednarek W 1998 Molecular systematics of holarctic raptors Order Falconiformes In Chancellor R D Meyburg B U amp Ferrero J J eds Holarctic Birds of Prey 29 48 Adenex amp WWGBP a b Wink Michael amp Sauer Gurth Hedi 2000 Advances in the molecular systematics of African raptors In Chancellor R D amp Meyburg B U eds Raptors at Risk 135 47 WWGBP Hancock House Berlin Blaine Wink Michael Sauer Gurth Hedi Ellis David amp Kenward Robert 2004 Phylogenetic relationships in the Hierofalco complex Saker Gyr Lanner Laggar Falcon In Chancellor R D amp Meyburg B U eds Raptors Worldwide 499 504 WWGBP Berlin a b c d Nittinger F Haring E Pinsker W Wink Michael Gamauf A 2005 Out of Africa Phylogenetic relationships between Falco biarmicus and other hierofalcons Aves Falconidae PDF Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 43 4 321 31 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0469 2005 00326 x Johnson J A Burnham K K Burnham W A Mindell D P 2007 Genetic structure among continental and island populations of gyrfalcons PDF Molecular Ecology 16 15 3145 60 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2007 03373 x hdl 2027 42 71471 PMID 17651193 S2CID 17437176 Griffiths Carole S 1999 Phylogeny of the Falconidae inferred from molecular and morphological data PDF Auk 116 1 116 30 doi 10 2307 4089459 JSTOR 4089459 Griffiths Carole S Barrowclough George F Groth Jeff G Mertz Lisa 2004 Phylogeny of the Falconidae Aves a comparison of the efficacy of morphological mitochondrial and nuclear data Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 32 1 101 09 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2003 11 019 PMID 15186800 White Clayton M Olsen Penny D amp Kiff Lloyd F 1994 Family Falconidae In del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew amp Sargatal Jordi editors Handbook of Birds of the World Volume 2 New World Vultures to Guineafowl 216 75 plates 24 28 Lynx Edicions Barcelona ISBN 84 87334 15 6 a b Becker Jonathan J 1987 Revision of Falco ramenta Wetmore and the Neogene evolution of the Falconidae PDF Auk 104 2 270 76 doi 10 1093 auk 104 2 270 JSTOR 4087033 a b Mlikovsky Jiri 2002 Cenozoic Birds of the World Part 1 Europe Archived 20 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ninox Press Prague IMNH 27937 A coracoid of a merlin sized species It does not seem close to F columbarius or the Recent North American species Becker 1987 Fox Canyon Local Fauna 4 3 4 8 million years ago Martin R A Honey J G amp Pelaez Campomanes P 2000 The Meade Basin Rodent Project a progress report Kansas Geological Survey Open file Report 2000 61 Paludicola 3 1 1 32 UMMP V27159 V29107 V57508 V57510 V57513 V57514 verification needed some limb bones Slightly smaller than a merlin and more robust than American kestrel and seems not too distant from F columbarius Feduccia J Alan Ford Norman L 1970 Some birds of prey from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas PDF Auk 87 4 795 97 doi 10 2307 4083714 JSTOR 4083714 NNPM NAN 41 646 Almost complete left tarsometatarsus Probably a prehistoric hobby perhaps less specialized for bird hunting Sobolev D V 2003 Novyj vid pliocenovogo sokola Falconiformes Falconidae A new species of Pliocene falcon Falconiformes Falconidae Vestnik zoologii 37 6 85 87 Russian with English abstract Boev Z 1999 Falco bakalovi sp n a Late Pliocene falcon Falconidae Aves from Varshets W Bulgaria Geologica Balcanica 29 1 2 131 35 Boev Z 2011 New fossil record of the Late Pliocene kestrel Falco bakalovi Boev 1999 from the type locality in Bulgaria Geologica Balcanica 40 1 3 13 30 Boev Z 2011 Falco bulgaricus sp n Aves Falconiformes from the Middle Miocene of Hadzhidimovo SW Bulgaria Acta zoologica bulgarica 63 1 17 35 Nikita V Zelenkov Evgeny N Kurochkin 2015 KLASS AVES In E N Kurochkin A V Lopatin N V Zelenkov Iskopaemye pozvonochnye Rossii i sopredelnyh stran Iskopaemye reptilii i pticy Chast 3 Fossil vertebrates of Russia and adjacent countries Fossil Reptiles and Birds Part 3 GEOS pp 86 290 ISBN 978 5 89118 699 6 Further reading EditFuchs J Johnson J A Mindell D P 2015 Rapid diversification of falcons Aves Falconidae due to expansion of open habitats in the Late Miocene Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 82 166 182 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2014 08 010 PMID 25256056 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Falco Wikispecies has information related to Falcon Look up falcon in Wiktionary the free dictionary Falconidae videos on the Internet Bird Collection ibc lynxeds com The Raptor Resource Project Peregrine owl eagle and osprey cams facts and other resources raptorresource org Falcon New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Falcon amp oldid 1160413441, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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