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Bateleur

The bateleur (/ˌbætəˈlɜːr, ˈbætəlɜːr/;[2] Terathopius ecaudatus) is a medium-sized eagle in the family Accipitridae. It is often considered a relative of the snake eagles and, like them, it is classified within the subfamily Circaetinae.[3] It is the only member of the genus Terathopius and may be the origin of the "Zimbabwe Bird", the national emblem of Zimbabwe.[4] Adult bateleurs are generally black in colour with a chestnut colour on the mantle as well as also on the rump and tail. Adults also have gray patches about the leading edges of the wings (extending to the secondaries in females) with bright red on their cere and their feet. Adults also show white greater coverts, contrasting with black remiges in males, gray patches on the underwing primaries and black wingtips. The juvenile bateleur is quite different, being largely drab brown with a bit of paler feather scaling. All bateleurs have extremely large heads for their size, rather small bills, large feet, relatively short legs, long, bow-like wings and uniquely short tails, which are much smaller still on adults compared to juvenile birds.[5][6]

Bateleur
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Subfamily: Circaetinae
Genus: Terathopius
Lesson, 1830
Species:
T. ecaudatus
Binomial name
Terathopius ecaudatus
(Daudin, 1800)
     approximate breeding range

This species is native to broad areas of Sub-Saharan Africa and scarcely up into Arabia. It is characteristically a bird of somewhat open habitats such as savanna with some trees present and open dry woodland.[5] It is in life history, a rather peculiar bird of prey with a free-wheeling generalist diet that includes much carrion but also tends to hunt a wide range of live prey, including many small to unexpectedly relatively large mammals and reptiles along with generally relatively small birds.[7] Bateleurs are highly aerial birds that spend much time soaring and will frequently fly with exaggerated embellishments, perhaps when excited or angered.[8] They tend to build a relatively small if sturdy stick nest in a large tree and lay only a single egg.[5] Despite being a rather aggressive bird in other contexts, bateleurs are easily flushed from their own nest, making them exceptionally vulnerable to nest predators, including humans, and nest failures.[9] It may take as long as 7 to 8 years to attain full maturity, perhaps the longest stretch to maturity of any raptor.[5][7] This species has long been known to be declining rather pronouncedly in overall population and it is mostly confined to protected areas today.[10][11][12] Currently the IUCN classifies the bateleur as an Endangered species due primarily to anthropogenic causes such as habitat destruction, pesticide usage and persecution.[1]

Taxonomy and etymology edit

The bateleur has been found to be a proper member of the subfamily Circaetinae, commonly called snake or serpent eagles, via a variety of genetic studies.[13] Given the outward similarities of the bateleur to snake eagles, the relationship has long been inferred by authors.[10] In particular, the bateleur was suggested to have their closest living relations in the similarly large Circaetus snake eagles.[3][14] This relationship was well borne-out by a genetic study that found that this species and the short-toed snake eagle (Circaetus gallicus) form a monophyletic clade, based on nucleotide sequences in the cytochrome b gene.[15] Even though, when contrasted with snake eagles, bateleurs appear to differ greatly in plumage patterns, the two genera show certain similarities in food, feeding behavior, and breeding biology.[13] However, Lerner and Mindell (2005), based on the molecular sequence from two mitochondrial genes and one nuclear intron, indicated a previously unsuspected close relationship of the bateleur with similarly "aberrant" but extremely different, in nearly every respect of appearance and life history, member of the Circaetinae, the Philippine eagle (Pithecophaga jefferyi).[16] Chromosome banding studies have also found a relatively recent genetic relationship of the bateleurs with the Old World vultures.[17]

The common name of "Bateleur" is French for "street performer".[18] Meanwhile, the scientific name is from name teras (Greek) for "marvelous"; ops (Greek) for "face"; e (Latin) for "without"; caudatus (Latin) "tail".[7] The bird was given its common name by François Levaillant, a French naturalist and explorer.[7] The original scientific name was Falco ecaudatus, given by François Marie Daudin, as the concept of disparate genera between birds of prey was devised later on (nor were falcons then known to be unrelated to many other variety of diurnal birds of prey).[19]

Description edit

 
Close-up of head
 
A captive immature bateleur

The bateleur is of note for its unique morphology and plumage, with some anatomical similarities to both snake eagles and vultures. The species has a thick neck and a very large, rather conspicuously cowled head with a proportionately short bill, albeit one covered with a very large cere. The cowl is also present on snake eagles but in those it is less dramatically apparent.[5][7] The other features in perched adult bateleurs are rather oddly stumpy, such as the short legs and exceptionally short tail, possibly the shortest proportionately of all raptors.[20] Its posture while perched is extremely upright, making them look like quite a tall raptor on the ground despite its rather short legs. Even while perched, the body tends to be dominated by their exceptionally large wings, which possess some 25 secondary feathers, perhaps more than any other raptor.[5] The adult bateleur usually has a chestnut coloration along the mantle, back, rump and tail, including the undertail coverts. The adult male bateleur is predominantly black with grey shoulders, which appear edged with white when freshly moulted. The adult female differs by having grey-brown, not black, on the greater coverts and black-tipped grey, not black, secondaries. Furthermore up to 7% of adults have a "cream morph" where they have chestnut tails but the other chestnut areas are almost fully replaced by cream to pale brown coloring. The cream morph may reportedly be slightly more prevalent in drier areas.[5][13][21] The bare parts of adult bateleurs are exceptionally conspicuous, with the adult cere, bare facial skin and feet all being rather bright red, however in some they can also temporarily fade to pink, pale pink or yellowish at times, such as when they are perching in the shade or bathing. The bare parts flush the most red during times of excitement. The bill itself is black with a yellow centre and red base. The eyes are dark brown.[5]

The juvenile is very distinct from the adults of the species. Juveniles of the bateleur have a longer tail than mature birds. They furthermore have essentially all brown coloring, with dull rufous to creamy edging apparent on some areas. The head of the juvenile bateleur is paler and tawnier than elsewhere on its body while the eyes are brown, the cere a rather unique greenish-blue and the feet whitish in colour.[5][22][23] At as late as 2–3 years of age, the immature bateleur is still much the same in appearance as the juvenile but by the fourth year becomes more sooty-brown, with sexual dimorphism already evidenced by the more extensive dark wing markings of males. In the 5th year, the plumage may show the first signs of chestnut and the grey colour about back and shoulders tend to manifest. Also from 3–5 years old, the cere and feet turn yellow then to dull-pink. By the sixth and seventh years of life, the plumage of subadult bateleurs blackens and the chestnut portions of the plumage increase. The shoulders become fully grey by the 8th year, the likely age of maturity.[5][24] As for the bare parts in juvenile bateleurs, the cere and facial skin are a distinct pale grey-blue to green-blue. The juvenile's feet are greenish-white to greyish-white, at 4-5 the cere, facial skin and feet turn yellow, then pink before finally reddening. The eyes are similar in hue to those of adult bateleurs but are a slightly lighter, being more honey-brown, while the bill of juveniles are mainly pale grey-blue in colour.[5][7]

 
Adult female bateleurs show more grey to the wing than males.

In flight, the bateleur appears as a rather large raptor with disproportionately elongated, rather narrow and slightly bow-shaped wings, which appear pinched in at the bases, broad across the secondaries and regularly narrow, pointed and upturned at the tips. Upon sighting, the wings often catch the eye before the large head, which is proportionately slightly bigger even than their cousins, the snake eagles.[5][25] The tail is so short in adult bateleurs that the feet extend below the tail tip, almost giving the impression that the raptor nearly has no tail.[5][20] This is as opposed to juveniles, where the feet come up about 5 cm (2.0 in) short of the tail tip, with the feet coming to exceed the tail, which is shrinking via moults, in length around the 5th year of maturation.[5][7] The adult bateleur's wingspan is an extraordinary 2.9 times greater than its total length.[5] The adult male bateleur is mostly black above with a chestnut back and tail and grey forewings, below he is black on the body, contrasting with a chestnut tail, as well as with the white wing linings and black flight feathers except for the greyish based primaries. The adult female bateleur is similar in plumage to the male overall but differs in her black-tipped grey secondaries above and more extensively white underwings with the black on the female confined to the wingtips and trailing edges.[5][20] The juvenile bateleur on the wing appears broader winged and especially longer tailed with a largely uniform brown coloration, including the greater coverts, with paler feather mainly about the head as well as on the flight feathers.[5]

Size edit

The bateleur is a mid-sized eagle and large raptor. It is likely the second heaviest of the Circaetinae subfamily of accipitrids. By far the largest of the subfamily is the Philippine eagle which is more than twice as massive and is far larger in all aspects of measurement than the bateleur, with a drastically differing structure (broad, relatively short wings, very long legs and tail). One traditional snake eagle, the brown snake eagle ( Circaetus cinereus), rivals the bateleur in most aspects of size including body mass but possesses a rather longer tail and slightly shorter but broader wings. Additionally, the widespread and slightly broader-winged short-toed snake eagle and proportionately long and slender-winged black-breasted snake eagle (Circaetus pectoralis) can be nearly as large in wingspan as the bateleur but tend to be somewhat less heavy.[5][3][26] The total length of the bateleur is 55 to 70 cm (22 to 28 in).[27] Typical length of a full-grown bird is around 63.5 cm (25.0 in).[28][29] The wingspan of bateleurs can vary from 168 to 190 cm (5 ft 6 in to 6 ft 3 in).[5] Body mass of bateleurs can vary from 1,800 to 3,000 g (4.0 to 6.6 lb).[30] One sample of 10 unsexed bateleurs weighed an average of 2,200 g (4.9 lb) while a smaller sample of three weighed an average of 2,392 g (5.273 lb).[26][31] Additionally, a median body mass of 2,385 g (5.258 lb) was cited in one study.[32]

The bateleur evidences some sexual dimorphism in favour of the female as is expected in raptorial birds but this size difference is fairly minimal relative to many other accipitrids, averaging up to about 6%.[5] Among standard measurements, males have a wing chord length of 476 to 553 mm (18.7 to 21.8 in) while that of the female is 530 to 559 mm (20.9 to 22.0 in). In tail length, adult males measure 98 to 124 mm (3.9 to 4.9 in) and can be even shorter in adult females at 105 to 113 mm (4.1 to 4.4 in), in some cases the adult's tail may reportedly measure as short as 72 mm (2.8 in). This contrasts with the tail of juvenile bateleurs which measures 142 to 172 mm (5.6 to 6.8 in). The tarsus can measure from 67 to 75 mm (2.6 to 3.0 in) in males and 72 to 75 mm (2.8 to 3.0 in) in females. Unsexed adult bateleurs in Tsavo East National Park were found to average 513 mm (20.2 in) in wing chord length, 34.5 mm (1.36 in) with a range of 28.6 to 38 mm (1.13 to 1.50 in) in culmen length and a relatively small hind claw length of 30.6 mm (1.20 in). While the hind or hallux claw is usually the most enlarged in most species of accipitrid, on the other hand in the Tsavo East bateleurs, unusually the middle claw on the front of the foot was slightly larger at 32 mm (1.3 in). Notably the proportions of bateleurs are similar to snake eagles with robust feet with rough, thick skin and short talons, the bateleur in particular having very thick, large toes structurally almost like those of a big owl and very sharp talons reminiscent in sharpness of highly predaceous larger African raptors. Further like snake eagles, bateleurs have a rather large headed but with a smallish beak coupled with a large gape. These adaptations generally equip the subfamily to better handle and ingest snakes relative to other accipitrids.[5][33][34][35]

Identification edit

 
The practically unmistakable form of a bateleur in flight.

The bateleur, particularly in its adult plumage, is often considered one of the most distinctive raptors in the world.[36] When perched or flying adults or older immatures are quite unmistakable.[5] The bateleur can be readily be distinguished even by inexperienced observers from the very differently-shaped and usually rather smaller-bodied and winged augur buzzards (Buteo augur) and jackal buzzards (Buteo rufofuscus). These do not overlap with bateleurs in nearly all respects of morphology, proportions nor flight actions. Nonetheless, both of these buzzards are sometimes mistaken for bateleurs due to their own combinations of black, white and chestnut, which are completely differently composed than those of the bateleur.[5][20][25] Despite how distinctive the buzzards are from the bateleur, some reports of bateleurs from areas where they are currently gone are almost certain to have been misidentified jackal buzzards.[7] Juveniles and immatures of up to 2–3 years old are hardly less distinctive in shape but could be confused, largely due to similar proportions of their large head, brown plumage and whitish legs with certain snake eagles. The brown snake eagle is perhaps the most similar to the juvenile bateleur but it has yellow eyes, longer legs, much broader, shorter and differently shaped wings with the tips of wings reaching its banded tail.[5][7] Even the black-chested and the rather slight Beaudouin's snake eagle (Circaetus beaudouinii) are sometimes considered potentially confusable with juvenile bateleurs, but both of these respective species are rather uniform and darker brown ventrally and about the head and much paler dorsally, with a highly different contrasting whitish cream colour below.[5]

Vocalizations edit

Bateleurs are usually silent for much of the year.[5] The main call, uttered whether perched or in aerial display, or when pirating from other raptors, is a far-carrying, loud raucous schaaaa-aw. They may too vocalize in a similar manner during courtship. Alternatively, bateleur calls may consist of resonant barking calls, kow-aw. The barking call can be accompanied by half-spread wings and jerking of the body up and down or may too be uttered in flight, the latter in a similar manner to that of a fish eagle.[5][10] Distraction display are sometimes accompanied by subdued barking chatter, ka-ka-ka-ka....[5][34] A not dissimilar call of kau-kau-kau-koaagh-koaggh has been described as given by perched birds.[10] Other softer calls are uttered when perched near the nest.[5] The young of the bateleur tend to engage harsh squealing call is kyup-kyup keeaw keeaw, usually as a hunger call at approach of parent with food. Also the species' young may make a melodious twip call.[10][34]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
A savannah bateleur in Bénin

The bateleur occupies a very large range through mainly sub-Saharan Africa.[5][37] The species resides in West Africa from southern Mauritania to Senegal, The Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, the northern portions of Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast and much of Ghana through western Burkina Faso, much of Togo and Benin and northern and central Nigeria.[1][38][39][40] It is possibly extinct in Mauritania, range restricted in Guinea (mainly to Kiang West) and Liberia but is still locally common where good habitat remains elsewhere in this region.[41][42] Similarly far north, a rare population is believed to persist out of Africa in extreme southwestern Saudi Arabia and western Yemen.[43][44] In central and east Africa, the bateleur may be found in northern Cameroon, southern Niger, southern Chad, southern Sudan, South Sudan, northern Central African Republic, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Djibouti, western Somalia, northern, eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo and a majority of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania.[45][46][47][48][49] In Southern Africa, the bateleur is found quite widely, being found almost throughout, where habitat is favorable, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique. Additionally, they may range Botswana in all but southernmost portion also being found still in northern and eastern Namibia and northwestern South Africa, where its range has contracted considerably from as far south once as the Cape Province to almost entirely to being found exclusively within protected areas north of the Orange River excepting a portion of Kruger National Park.[13][50][51][52][53][54][55] The species is possibly extirpated from Eswatini in southern Africa.[56] The bateleur is regarded as a vagrant in the countries of Tunisia, Cyprus and rarely Egypt, Israel and Iraq.[5][57][58] In April 2012 a juvenile bateleur was seen in Algeciras in southern Spain.[59] In 2015 and 2022, juveniles spotted as far north as Black Sea coast of Turkey in the cities of Istanbul and Sinop respectively.[60]

Habitat edit

 
An adult and juvenile in characteristic savanna habitat in Botswana.

The bateleur is a common to fairly common resident or nomadic[23] bird of the partially open savanna country and of woodland within Sub-Saharan Africa.[5][38] During breeding, it tends to require closed-canopy savannah-woodland habitats, including Acacia savanna as well as mopane and miombo woodlands. They may too acclimate to thornveld and overall various fairly shrubby areas.[5][7][53] It tends to rarely occur in heavily forested and mountainous habitats. However, while the species can forage extensively in largely treeless habitats such as treeless savanna but is nearly as rare in pure desert lacking arborescent growth as it is in tropical rainforests.[61] Bateleurs are seldom to be found around extensive wetlands but may regularly be found near watering holes.[5] Although often in fairly dry savanna habitats, in Kenya it is reportedly absent from areas where the rainfall is under 250 mm (9.8 in) annually, probably because it limits the growth of the leafy trees that they require for nesting.[62] In Ethiopia, it tends to be associated with well-wooded areas.[46] Habitat tends to be most closely studied in southern Africa.[6] It is mostly common found in broad-leaved woodland in the Okavango Delta in Botswana. In Namibia it is often found over tall woodland near drainage lines, and over ephemeral rivers in north-eastern Namibia and within the more arid Etosha National Park.[61] In Zambia, it is found in a variety of habitats from woodlands to open plains but avoids the most densely wooded areas.[51] Reportedly in Malawi, it is often associated with Forest–savanna mosaics but is sometimes regularly seen over cultivated areas and even may be seen flying over large cities.[52] To the contrary, in Mozambique it is said to avoid areas with a dense human population.[63] The species can occur from sea level up to 4,500 m (14,800 ft), but not normally a mountain-dwelling species and mainly occurs below 3,000 m (9,800 ft).[5] This is supported in Zimbabwe, where the bateleur is relatively common but appears to largely avoid the extensive amount of hilly and rugged areas present in that country.[54]

Behaviour edit

 
A juvenile bateleur flying while carrying a bird's foot in its mouth.

This bateleur is unusually conspicuous due to its propensity for gliding flights over favorable habitats in much of Africa.[7] The bird spends a considerable amount of time on the wing, particularly in low-altitude flights.[64] Due to the conspicuous behaviour and colorful plumage, the bateleur is frequently described in superlatives such as "one of the most beautiful and spectacular things that flies".[10] This species tends to take off with unusually fast, shallow beats for a bird of this relative large size.[5] After take-off, the bateleur sails at a mean speed of about 50 to 60 km/h (31 to 37 mph). They often rock from side-to-side with the wings held in a strong dihedral with very limiting flapping, vaguely recalling the flight of the American turkey vulture (Cathares aura) although the flight is generally more forceful, fast and acrobatic than that species and at times can be evocative of a huge falcon.[65][66] Although the species tends to fly fairly low, bateleurs can soar and circle quite high as well.[5][10][20] Engaged in its aforementioned dihedral flight it is often cants continuously from side-to-side, likely the origin of which it was given its common name (loosely "tumbler", "balancer" or "tightrope walker") of French derivation.[10] Various flying embellishments may be undertaken nearly aseasonally.[5][34] Although not typically given to forward somersault nor to loop-the-loop, bateleurs may with some regularity perform a rapid 360 degrees sideways roll.[10] They are often given to flying with more embellishments when in the presence of another bateleur, even with juveniles provoking one another entirely uncoupled seemingly from breeding courtship or territorial displays.[5] Typical home ranges of around 40 km2 (15 sq mi) were reported per pair in Kruger National Park and these were considered unusually small by overall species standards.[5] Intruders to whom this behaviour is displayed always submit and submission is shown by retreating to a safe upper boundary (elevation). Males and females both display this behaviour in all stages of the breeding cycle. This behaviour is mainly shown to members of the same sex and particularly to non-adults, as it is thought that they may have a greater ability to take over another bird's territory (having greater competitive ability for limited food resources).[8]

The bateleur is generally a solitary bird. However, juveniles may accompany one or both parents for about three months and loose congregations of as many as 40-50 or more have been record of mainly immatures. These tend to be aggregations of otherwise unassociated immature bateleurs attracted to rich feeding areas such as newly-discovered carrion, bush fires, recently burnt areas or temporary floods and occasionally by termite emergences.[3][5] In the wild bateleurs are shy of man and sensitive to disturbance at the nest, easily abandoning the structure.[67] In captivity, however, they become unusually tame.[68] Bateleur eagles are among a group of raptors that secrete a clear, salty fluid from their nares whilst eating. According to Schmidt-Nielson's 1964 hypothesis, this is due to the general necessity for birds to use an extrarenal mechanism of salt secretion to aid water reabsorption.[69]

Nomadism and dispersals edit

Generally, as in most raptors found as breeding residents in Africa, the bateleur is considered sedentary and territorial but it is a species that requires very large home ranges.[5] However, in general the species neither as staunchly residential nor sedentary as many other Sub-Saharan African raptors.[34][70] Both immature and sometimes adult bateleurs are considered clearly nomadic.[5][71] At times, the bateleur is even regarded as an "irruptive or local migrant".[13][72] Some regular north-to-south movements may occur in West Africa and may occur transequatorially in East Africa to avoid heavy rains.[5] In Kruger, immatures are driven out by adults on territory during the breeding season and then often wander widely before returning for the non-breeding season.[5] Recoveries of juveniles in southern Africa show that individuals have been recovered at assorted distances from their nests of origin ranging from as far as 30 to 285 km (19 to 177 mi) away. It was noted that in some cases, heavier rainfall may have caused farther afield dispersals.[73]

Thermoregulation edit

 
Bateleur sunbathing by a waterhole

Bateleurs seem to devote an exceptional amount of time to thermoregulation frequently spending much of its day variously sunning, to warm up, and bathing, to cool off.[34] These eagles are frequently seen to enter water-bodies for a bath and then open their wings to often sunbathe. Standing upright and holding their wings straight out to the sides and tipped vertically, a classic 'phoenix' pose as they turn to follow the sun.[74] Bateleurs will stand on the ground with their wings spread, exposing the feathers to direct sunlight, warming the oils in the feathers. The bird will then spread the oils with its beak to improve its aerodynamics. In some countries, local nicknames of the species may include as the "Conifer eagle" or "Pine eagle" due to its feathers resembling a conifer cone when fluffed up and engaging in thermoregulatory behaviour.[75][76][77] At times, this is described as a "striking heraldic posture".[7] Bateleurs may also be seen "praying" allowing ants to crawl over the wings and feathers, collecting bits of food, dead feather and skin material. When covered in ants, the bateleur then ruffles its feathers, startling the ants, which react by secreting formic acid as self-defence. This in turn kills the ticks and fleas, possibly ridding the host of its parasites.[78]

Dietary biology edit

 
A bateleur feeding on a hare.

The bateleur is a dietary generalist. This species generally forages from the flight, flying mostly low and straight whilst scanning the ground, periodically banking and retracing sections of the track when possible foods are spotted. Their hunting range can be truly enormous ranging in some cases up to 55 to 200 km2 (21 to 77 sq mi).[5][23] Bateleurs may spend up to 8–9 hours or up to 80% of daylight on the wing, perhaps largely for hunting and foraging purposes, and have reported having even covered as much as 300 to 500 km (190 to 310 mi) in a single day.[5] When potential prey or food is spotted, they then descend in tight spirals to check it out.[5] The bateleur is a very effective discoverer of carrion at all times and often is the first to come to large carcasses or roadkills.[5][13] Juveniles appear to attend large carrion much more than adults and dietary studies appear to support that carrion is rather more significant to the foods of juvenile and immature bateleurs compared to adults.[5][7][33] Despite an aptitude for scavenging, descriptions of this eagle as "not a very rapacious species" are erroneous as it has been found to a highly powerful predator for its size and one that is often rather active at pursuing living prey, with seemingly most food consumed during the breeding season being prey that the bateleur has itself killed.[10][7][33] Bateleurs kill most prey on the ground with a steep stoop on partially closed wings. On the evidence, they may alter their stoop onto prey with a slow drop with raised wings, rather in a gentle descent like a parachute, largely when taking slower moving prey such as some reptiles.[5][7][79][80] Additionally, they can also take birds on the wing.[79] As occasional kleptoparasites, they sometimes aerially pirate foods from other raptors. Alternately, they may try to intercept other raptors' kills while the raptor is feeding on them, whether it be on the ground, in a tree or on a rock, or even immediately after the kill is made.[5][7] These piratical attacks are sometimes carried out against large carrion eaters like vultures and even against larger eagles, and in them, they may drive their target to the ground, with interlocking talons or trading shallow blows with their feet.[7][79] Bateleurs also hunt insects by walking on the ground, particularly after grassfires, and will patrol for small carcasses alongside roads.[5]

Bateleurs forage almost entirely based on opportunity and have no particular specialization on any particular prey type.[7] As a result, a wide prey spectrum has been reported, with around 160 prey species known, they thus rival martial eagles (Polemaetus bellicosus) and perhaps just slightly behind tawny eagles (Aquila rapax) as the most diversified feeder known among African eagles.[7][6][33][79] Among their prey, mammals, birds and reptiles, roughly in that order, seem to be considerably preferred over other prey taxa.[7][79] Based on morphology, their long middle toes have been cited as an indication that they originally diversified to become a bird-eater but a rather small degree of sexual dimorphism between males and females indicates a preference for mammal eating.[5][81][82] By the most complete picture of the bateleurs diet was a compilation study that compiled 1879 prey items from differing parts of the range.[79] In it was found that bateleurs derived 54.6% of the diet from mammals, with perhaps two-thirds to about half of the diet being mammalian carrion, along with 23.7% of the diet being from birds, 17.8% from reptiles, 1.9% from fish, 1.8% from invertebrates and an extremely small amount (about 0.2%) of amphibian food.[79] Predominantly, within the compilation study, preys were unidentified to species, with 58.4% of the carrion sources, 26.9% of live mammals, genera, or families, and 22.2% of birds unidentified to species.[79]

 
The markedly rough, large and short-clawed foot of a captive adult bateleur.

Differing study areas show differing prey results for bateleurs.[7][79] In a woodland-based study of nesting birds in Zimbabwe, 175 prey items were found for bateleurs with the diet seemingly dominated by prey appearing to be taken alive and relatively large prey at that. The primary prey in the study were found to be scrub hare (Lepus saxatilis) (at 26.3% of the prey by number), Cape hyrax (Procavia capensis) (at 10.3%), Gambian pouched rat (Cricetomys gambianus) (6.85%), brown greater galago (Otolemur crassicaudatus) (6.28%) and helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris) (4.57%).[83] In the more hilly, rocky country of Zimbabwe, seemingly live prey was also preferred but a stronger prevalence of birds was detected among the 249 prey items. In this study, the main prey were scrub hares (22.8%), unidentified doves (10%), glossy starlings (6.72%), other small birds of around 100 g (3.5 oz) (6.69%), crested guineafowls (Guttera pucherani) (5.43%) and unidentified mammals (5.02%).[84] In Kruger National Park, a much stronger preference for likely or verified carrion was detected in the bateleur's breeding season diet. Here, 731 food items in thornveld type habitat and 341 prey items in savanna type habitat were reviewed. It was estimated 31.6% of the diet was carrion was from medium-sized antelopes of around 20 to 40 kg (44 to 88 lb) in weight, followed by small carrion sources of around 8 to 15 kg (18 to 33 lb) to somewhat larger carrion from 54 kg (119 lb) impala (Aepyceros melampus). Beyond carrion, the Kruger food study found that 16.4% of the total diet consisted of unidentified live mammals, 3.73% each by assorted dove species and lilac-breasted rollers (Coracias caudatus), 3% by glossy starlings and 1.6% by skinks.[79] Further variation was found in the diet farther north in Tsavo East National Park in Kenya. Of 139 prey items from the nest areas of 2 pairs, mostly live prey predominated again, here led by Kirk's dik-diks (Madoqua kirkii) at 19.42%, unidentified snakes at 18.7%, cape hares at 4.3%, Crocidura shrews at 3.59%, ungulate carrion at 3.59%, Streptopelia doves at 3.59%, common dwarf mongoose (Helogale parvula) at 2.87% and red-crested korhaan (Lophotis ruficrista) at 2.87%.[33] Without statistics, Cangandala National Park in Angola, the prey species reported at nests included brown greater galago, greater cane rat (Thryonomys swinderianus), Gambian pouched rat, and unidentified hares.[50] Unfortunately, detailed dietary studies have only been conducted in southern and eastern Africa and details of the diet are unknown elsewhere, however it is assumed the species is a generalist and opportunist throughout its range.[85]

 
Juvenile bateleur with avian prey.

In general, a picture emerges that the primary food sources of bateleurs are live-taken medium-sized mammals, carrion of generally larger mammal species, rather smallish bird prey, and a small diversity of reptiles.[7][34][79] When selecting mammals, small prey such as rodents and shrews are by no means neglected but a preference for relatively large rodents tends to be found.[7] These may consist of assorted mice, gerbils and dormice to ground squirrels, bush squirrels and vlei rats to very large rodents such as Gambian pouched rats, greater and lesser cane rat (Thryonomys gregorianus) and South African springhares (Pedetes capensis) although certainly any consumption of adult Cape porcupine (Hystrix africaeaustralis) is derived from carrion.[7][34][33][79][86] Additionally, most African species of hare as well as, more secondarily, hedgehogs and elephant shrews and a variety of smallish carnivorous mammals.[7][79][84][87][88] The latter may include live prey species including several species of mongoose, from dwarf to banded mongoose (Mungos mungo) and Selous's mongoose (Paracynictis selousi), both about the same body mass as a bateleur, and at least four species of genets as well as striped polecats (Ictonyx striatus).[34][79][84][87][89] Over 30 mammal species have been identified as foods for bateleurs exclusive from carrion, including various larger food species, with carrion of ungulates ranging in size from that of Sharpe's grysbok (Raphicerus sharpei) to African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) and the carrion of carnivorans from the size of jackals to that of lions (Panthera leo).[79][80] In compilation studies, the most often fed-on ungulates by bateleurs that were identified to species were reported to be impala and steenbok (Raphicerus campestris), at 4.2% and 2.2% of the total foods, respectively .[79][80] Bateleurs have been reported to opportunistically scavenge on human remains, as was reportedly witnessed during the South African Border War.[7]

Outside of galagos, among primate foods most monkeys observed in the diet such as baboons and vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) are thought to be largely scavenged as carrion.[79][80] However, studies of king colobus (Colobus polykomos) and Angola colobus (Colobus angolensis) in Central and southeastern Africa (both where few details are known of bateleurs' diets), it was mentioned bateleurs may be a potential predator of troops based on the anti-predator activity and vocalizations of these species provoked by bateleurs.[90][91] The bateleur, using its large, powerful feet, does not shy away from very large prey and has been known to regularly kill mammals heavier than itself including scrub hare estimated to weigh 2,600 g (5.7 lb), springhares estimated to weigh 3,000 g (6.6 lb), Cape hyrax estimated to weigh 3,800 g (8.4 lb), Kirk's dik diks estimated to weigh 4,000 g (8.8 lb) and greater cane rats estimated to weigh 4,500 g (9.9 lb).[33][79] Even more impressive mammalian kills have been suspected, with instances where reportedly adults black-backed jackals (Canis mesomelas), honey badgers (Mellivora capensis), and aardwolf (Protelas cristatus), any of which may weigh around twice the aforementioned large mammal prey for bateleurs, may have been unexpectedly killed by bateleurs.[13][33][80] Furthermore, an instance of attempted predation in Tanzania on an adult honey badger was witnessed, ending with both the bateleur and badger dying from the ensuing fight.[92]

 
Male at Maasai Mara with a coqui francolin kill.

In all, a considerable diversity of birds may be taken by bateleurs, perhaps around 80 species being known in their prey spectrum.[7][6][79] They often focus on rather small, if normally live caught, birds compared to other eagles of a similar size.[7][79] Bateleurs may show a special liking for pigeons and doves as prey, although only about a half dozen have been identified to species. Doves usually of the genus Streptopelia were found to be the most prominent avian prey in compilation studies, accounting for 17.6% of known avian prey and 4.25% of the total foods in several large bateleur food studies.[7][23][79][93] Much other similar avian prey, commonly those weighing around 80 to 300 g (2.8 to 10.6 oz), including a surprising diversity of nightjars (perhaps since they are prone to end up as roadkill due to their predilection for resting on roads by night) and shorebirds like lapwings, other plovers, sandpipers and terns in addition to kingfishers (up to the size of the giant kingfisher (Megaceryle maxima)), rollers, hoopoes, small hornbills, parakeets and some passerines, usually those with a conspicuous presence on the savanna such as shrikes, weavers and starlings.,[7][34][33][46][79][84][94][95][96] Unlike many other eagles of similar or larger size, there are few instances of waterfowl or large waders (i.e. heron, storks, flamingoes, etc.) falling prey to bateleurs although at least one African spoonbill (Platalea alba) was recorded as bateleur prey.[7][79][80] The largest typical avian prey tends to be assorted gamebirds, with most common guineafowl, spurfowl and francolin, smaller available species of bustard and some quail known in their diet. The largest of these avian prey species attacked by bateleurs top out around 1,200 to 1,800 g (2.6 to 4.0 lb).[7][34][33][79][84] The reason for the disinterest in mid-sized to large avian prey of sizes comparable to some mammals and reptiles are known to have been taken by bateleurs is not clear, as the bateleur does not, in general, appear to shy away from difficult-to-capture birds nor to large and dangerous prey of other animal classes.[34][79][84]

 
A bateleur depicted killing a young jackal.

The bateleur was once reported to be a very common predator of reptiles like their cousins the snake eagles.[7] Although this is somewhat erroneous, bateleurs do not infrequently include reptiles in their diet.[79] As much as 30% of the diet can be reptilian, mainly snakes.[6][33][79] Some reptiles taken are small and innocuous such as a few species of plated lizards and a few species of colubrid snakes.[6][79] However, like their cousins, the bateleur does not seem to shy away from venomous snakes nor other large or formidable reptiles. They have been known to take puff adder (Bitis arietans), boomslangs (Dispholidus typus), Egyptian cobras (Naja haje) and unidentified mambas, with the latter actually reported to be the most prominent known reptile prey in compilation studies, accounting for 18.9% of reported reptile prey and 3.35% of total prey.[7][79][80][93] They can take sizable snakes, even adult puff adders which can grow much heavier than the eagle themselves.[92] However, the bateleur is not immune to venom nor is as well specialized to dispatching venomous snakes as are snake eagles, and, in one case, a mutual killing recorded between a puff adder and a bateleur was reported.[7] Sizable, and far from defenseless, if not venomous reptiles known in the prey spectrum may include monitor lizards including Nile (Varanus niloticus) and savannah monitors (Varanus exanthematicus), some terrapins and tortoises and African rock pythons (Python sebae), although excepting small, young ones, these types of reptilian prey are perhaps in many cases consumed after they are already deceased, such as via roadkills.[7][34][79][93] Nevertheless, bateleurs occasionally hunt small tortoises and monitor lizards, and in one instance, live predation on an adult monitor lizard about 1.4 m in length has been reported.[97][84] The bateleur is known to carry snakes to the nest in the style of ordinary snake eagles, with the dead snake being half swallowed and subsequently extracted by the capturing bird's mate, usually the female at the nest.[7] Seldom identified prey may include assorted, and almost entirely unidentified, insects. Mostly swarming social insects seem to attract bateleurs, including locusts.[7][79] It was recently verified that bateleurs will semi-regularly visit termite mounds to hunt down alates, although such feeding has been inferred in the past.[98] Other prey can include a rare amphibian, none of which are known to be identified to species or family.[79][80] Although fish are not typically taken, as much as 1.1% of the diet locally can consist of large Clarias catfish and it is likely that stranded fish are not neglected when opportuned upon.[7][6][79]

Interspecific predatory relationships edit

The bateleur seems to adapt to living in the highly competitive continent of Africa by foraging with a lack of specialization, with a seeming lack of discrimination regarding the prey item/food source nor its origin although its highly aerial and free-ranging foraging mode is quite unique.[10][7] The bateleur, nonetheless, must face considerable and intense competition from other birds of prey especially.[7] The range of other raptors, especially other eagles and vultures, may appear to be daunting.[7][6] One of the most similar eagles to regularly encounter the bateleur is the tawny eagle. These two species overlap in many significant ways, being similar in body mass and predatory prowess as well as in nesting habitat, tendency to attack a wide size range of prey (including large prey) and general disposition. Furthermore, both of these eagles show ability to freely change feeding methods between live predation, scavenging on carrion and piracy.[7][9] In Tsavo East National Park, bateleurs were studied along with tawny eagles, significantly larger martial eagles and slightly smaller African hawk-eagles (Aquila spilogaster).[33] Here all four largish eagles relied primarily upon Kirk's dik dik for food but were mostly slightly staggered in breeding season, with the bateleur nesting on average earlier than the other eagles.[33] The diet was by far most similar with that tawny eagle in Tsavo East, overlapping 66% in prey species and 72% in prey weight. Meanwhile, the diet overlapped 32% in species and 50% in weight with martial eagles and 37% in species and 57% in weight with African hawk-eagles. The one discrepancy, which is noted in other studies as well, is that the bateleur tends to focus on smaller birds than tawny eagles when selecting avian prey.[7][33][99] Bateleurs also bear an advantage over tawny eagles in their ability forage in open habitats, with the absence of perches, due to their aerial foraging methods.[33] However, data indicates that the tawny eagles is dominant over bateleurs typically at disputed kills or carrion.[7][100] One study accrued 26 instances of tawny eagles displacing bateleurs against only 5 where bateleurs displaced tawny eagles, giving illustration to the tawny eagles dominance. Frequently, the bateleur waits until the tawny eagle is done eating before it does so itself if both are at a carcass site.[101]

 
A juvenile bateleur with a tawny eagle, a similar eagle in life history.

Bateleurs may encounter a huge range of other scavengers when coming to carrion. Most clearly vultures are often present at carrion. However, due to their smaller size, the tawny eagle and especially the bateleur can begin foraging for carrion earlier in the morning, while the vultures must wait for updrafts to undertake flight.[102][103] Bateleurs in particular are considered most likely to find a carcass first before other scavengers.[103][104] This was verified in a study in Maasai Mara where it was additionally found that scavengers kept to body size in terms of hierarchy. The descending order of scavenger dominance was stated to rank starting with the spotted hyenas (Crocuta croctua) at the top and black-backed jackals and feral dogs (Canis lupus familiaris), then the lappet-faced vulture (Torgos tracheliotos), the Rüppell's vulture (Gyps rueppellii), followed by all other vultures with the tawny eagle and the bateleur in the second most and the most subordinate scavenger positions.[105] Therefore, the bateleur is considered a scavenger with high search efficiency but low competitive ability.[103][104][105][106] However, the bateleur does benefit from the larger scavengers, being less able to access a large carcass, at best feeding on the eyes of said carcass unless it is already otherwise torn asunder such as large carnivore prey or roadkills.[13][104] With the epidemic-level reduction of vultures in Africa, it was found in Maasai Mara that both bateleurs and tawny eagles have been found to actually increase in sighting frequency in sync with the vanishing numbers of remaining vultures, with the number of bateleur sightings increasing by 52%.[107] To the contrary of the expected hierarchy, cases are known where bateleurs have attacked and dominated much larger scavenging birds including white-backed vultures (Gyps africanus) and bearded vulures (Gypaetus barbatus), with these having been successfully displaced or lost carrion to a bateleur.[10][6] Even more impressively, cases where bateleurs interacting with much larger, more powerful martial eagles have involved instances where the bateleurs have attacked, pirated and even brought to ground in clashes that appear to end in a drawl. However, the martial eagle occupies a notably higher trophic level than the bateleurs and is not considered subservient to bateleurs due its even greater predatory prowess.[7][34][79] Similarly, instances of considerable competition have been reported between bateleurs and African fish eagles (Haliaeetus vocifer), which are similarly prone to opportunistic piracy and aggressive interspecific relations. However, the two species are partitioned by habitat and primary prey.[108]

It is uncommon-to-rare but not unprecedented that bateleurs may prey on other raptors.[7][109] Bateleurs have been documented preying on black-winged kites (Elanus caeruleus), wintering lesser spotted eagles (Clanga pomarina), gabar goshawks (Micronisus gabar), barn owls (Tyto alba), spotted eagle-owls (Bubo africanus) and peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus).[79][84][93][110] Additionally, they were considered a likely potential predator upon nestlings of the white-backed vulture.[111] Certainly the most impressive instance of intraguild predation documented as committed by bateleurs is when one was seen killing an adult Verreaux's eagle owl (Bubo lacteus), a formidable top predator among owls and possibly the largest avian prey ever reported for a bateleur.[7][112] The predators of mature bateleurs themselves are not well-documented and in fact, Verreaux's eagle owls may the only species verified to repeatedly prey upon bateleurs, but this is probably due to rare predator identification at bateleur nests.[113][114] Bateleurs are usually considered apex predators.[115] By contrast, bateleur nestlings are vulnerable to predation compared to other raptors. Though adult bateleurs can simply leave the nest or crouch below the nest rim to reduce nest detectability to many predators, they can be very aggressive toward conspecifics as well as other raptors, and occasionally human intruders. However, due to their unique foraging mode which takes them far from the nest for long periods of the day, the physical defense is largely unable. Thus, chicks are presumed to be vulnerable to a huge range of predators although very few are properly identified. Based on other eagles in Africa, these are likely to include various sizes of mammalian carnivores, snakes, monitors and various birds of prey, including even perhaps much smaller species and vultures due to the long periods bateleur eaglets are left unprotected.[8][34][101][116]

Breeding edit

 
A probable breeding pair with the female on the left.

Bateleurs are long-lived species, slow-maturing, slow-breeding species,[61] Bateleurs court each other or re-establish existing pair bonds what is considered, a "spectacular" courtship display.[10][7] During the courtship display, an exaggerated flight is undertaken, in which the male dives down at the female who rolls to present him her claws. Additionally, he sometimes flies with legs dangling loosely, during which the wings may be flapped to create a conspicuous whup-whup-whup noise like a loose sail in the breeze. Very infrequently, a male bateleur may make a 360 degree lateral roll, accompanied by loud whup-whup noises, at times display may involve 2 males with a single female, but during breeding only one male is usually actively courtship. A further chasing flight reported is not necessarily nuptial and may be performed by birds of the same size and by an adult or an immature and in some cases is linked to the sociality of the species.[5][10][7][34][79] The bateleur is usually rather monogamous and likely, with the survivorship of each mate, mates for life.[7] However, rare instances of possible polygyny have been reported.[117] The bateleur breeding season tends to fall from September to May in West Africa, however juveniles have also been recorded in Mauritania in September.[5][41][118] Reportedly, the nesting season can be virtually any month in East Africa but chiefly is some time around December–August, which also is the corresponding peak breeding time in Southern Africa, with nesting as late as August to October in the southern stretches of the continent considered unusual.[5][7][51][52][54][119][120] In Somalia, the breeding season however fell from July to December while in Ethiopia there was no detectable peak whatsoever.[46][47]

Nests edit

 
A bateleur on its nest.

Nests are located in fairly large trees, sometimes near a watercourse, either in hilly terrain or open flat country. At times, bateleurs are adaptable and perhaps even favor towards nesting near manmade openings such as roads or paths.[5][10][7] Nests are typically at 10 to 15 m (33 to 49 ft) above the ground but in extreme may be from 7 to 25 m (23 to 82 ft) high.[5][7] The nest is normally within the canopy in the fork of the main trunk or a large lateral branch so that it is shaded for much of the day.[7][54] A variety of tree species may be used. In southern Africa, favored trees tend to Adansonia and especially Acacia trees. Senegalia nigrescens trees may too be popular.[7][54][67] Bateleurs usually nest on structures made by themselves but one nest was reported in on a buffalo weaver nest and was difficult to observe.[7] Furthermore, old nest of other birds may be used, in one case a Wahlberg's eagle (Hieraaetus wahlbergi) nest taken over and added to deepen it.[7] The nest is a solid structure of medium-sized sticks, measuring about 60 cm (24 in) across, 30 cm (12 in) deep with a leafy cup of about 25 cm (9.8 in) across. Snake eagles and their kin tend to build relatively small if bulky nests relative to their size and the bateleur is no exception, with their nest size being about half that of in diameter of a similarly-sized eagle like the tawny eagle.[5][7][85] Nests tend to be lined with green leaves by the bateleur pair.[5] Both sexes of bateleur are known to contribute to the building or repair of a nest, a process that typically takes about 1–2 months, though sometimes nest construction can be reportedly protracted even in years where no breeding occurs.[7] They often subsequently use a new nest in the same general area in consecutive breeding seasons, usually not more than 1 to 3 km (0.62 to 1.86 mi) away, and may reuse a nest they built previously. There is much variation in this regard, from 1 nest being used in 5 consecutive years to no nest reusage in 3 recorded years.[7] Nests built by bateleurs tend to be favored by lanner falcons (Falco biarmicus), probably in part because the eagle's young are fledged by July–August when lanners tend to lay; however 1 nestling was persistently mobbed by a lanner during its last week at the nest.[7] In ranching country in Zimbabwe, nests are spaced 13 to 16 km (8.1 to 9.9 mi) apart.[7] In Mozambique, nesting spacing was found to be about 5 km (3.1 mi).[121]

Eggs and development of young edit

In this species, only one egg is ever laid.[5][7][51][52] Their eggs are quite large for the size of the bird, being broadly oval and usually an unspotted chalky white but sometimes with a few red stains or indistinct reddish markings, which may be cosmetic from feeding and defecating of the parents. The bateleur's egg is quite similar in size and coloration to most snake eagles, which also generally lay a single egg.[5][10][7][122] A bateleur egg may measure from 74.2 to 87 mm (2.92 to 3.43 in) in height, with an average of 77.4 mm (3.05 in) in a sample of 24 and 79.1 mm (3.11 in) in a sample of 50, by 57 to 68.1 mm (2.24 to 2.68 in) in diameter, with an average of 62.3 mm (2.45 in) in 24 and 62.7 mm (2.47 in) in 50. The eggs are comparable in size to those of martial and crowned eagles (Stephanoaetus cornatus), eagles of easily up to twice the body size of a bateleur.[10][7][34][120] The female bateleur normally incubates alone, though rarely males are seen to do so as well.[7][79] The female is fed by the male but takes spells off in which she probably feeds on her own kills and the male may take over incubation, although reports of instances where he may do the majority of incubation are probably inaccurate.[10][7] While the elastic breeding season suggests an indifference to climatic concerns relative to the wet season and dry season, the bateleur is usually considered an eagle that lays earlier in the year than overlapping eagles.[33][123][124] The incubation stage lasts for 52 to 59 days, averaging about 55 days, and may the longest of any African raptor. Reports of incubation lasting for only 42–43 days are probably erroneous.[5][10][7][120]

The hatchling is highly altricial and very feeble at first, perhaps even more so than most other eagles, being unable to lift its own heavy head and possesses a deeply wrinkled cere.[10][7] The small eaglet is initially covered in creamy down with a chocolate-brown patch behind the eye that matches the rest of the down colour above with creamy flanks.[10] At about 2 weeks, the young eaglet becomes somewhat more active and the down develops a patchy appearance.[7] At 3 weeks, the eaglet has a downy white head but the down colour above is dark brown, with the first brown feathers sprouting on back of head, secondaries and scapulars.[10] By 4 weeks, they no longer have any white down and brown feathers grow especially the back and wing ones; while a week later, the feathers continue emerge and the secondaries outgrow the primaries. Thence at 7 weeks, the feathering of the foreparts occurs rapidly, being complete by 35 days, but the wing and tail feathers are still growing, the last remaining down being on underwing coverts.[10][7] The young eaglet resembles those of snake eagles in appearance and feather growth pattern, particularly the retarded growth of the primary feathers, and in general coloring become greyer as the eaglet ages.[10][7] The nestling may first stand at about 5 weeks as well as engage in wing-flapping.[10] Pre-independence juveniles may perch or lie in prone position before they can fly well.[7] The stage at which the young first feeds itself is dictated by what prey is brought; if it is large, the parents will feed the young to 40 days, but small fragments will be eaten unaided by the downy young.[7] Around 6 weeks is when the eaglet can typically feed itself for the first time.[10] At 9 weeks, eaglet bateleurs have been recorded doing effective threat displays against humans.[10] Fledgling typically occurs around 90–125 days with reported extremes at as little as 93 to as much as 194 days.[5][7] The young often returns to the nest after its first flight and continues to do so. The young bateleurs become independent quickly within about a week in some case and in others remain closely by and dependent on their parents for about 2–4 months. The young bateleurs may follow their parents around in flight until they are fed. Coaxing behaviour by parents has been recorded (keeping away food until they fly to it, perhaps gradually encouraging the young eagle to go farther afield).[5][10][7] After leaving the nest area, the young bateleurs often wander widely, for example one was recorded to have covered 1,347 km2 (520 sq mi).[7] When soaring near another bateleur nest, young bateleurs are often fiercely attacked by adult males.[10] There are some reports, even frequent reports it is said, of immature bateleurs staying to help incubate the eggs although generally this presumably rare.[10][125]

Parental behaviour edit

When the nest is approached, at times bateleurs will react forcibly, engaging in aggressive barks, sometimes diving down from flight at the intruder with loud flapping wings. When disturbed in this way, however bateleurs very often depart and they will often not return to the nest for up to several hours. Generally, it seem to be more likely than almost any other African eagle to desert their young.[10][7][79] During the incubation and nestling period, the male is more demonstrative than the female at the nest, sometimes doing the distraction display and regular dive-bomb attacks if the nest tree is climbed, the female more commonly flies away in the distance. Once a lone male baboon climbed a nest tree, the female bateleur sat and incubated while the male dive bombed it. When this failed to drive it off, the male settled on a branch between the baboon and the nest and threatened the monkey with raised wings, the baboon was never dislodged but did not harass the eagles at the nest.[10][7] Bateleur parents are highly sensitive to breeding from human disturbance, oddly they may permit and adapt to regular inspections of the nest but resent an attempts to hide or conceal photographic equipment nearby and regular desert the nest even with a small nestling, thus nest photography should be avoided.[10][7][79] The ease with which bateleurs are flushed away from their nest appears to lead to uncommonly high nest predation rates, while many other eagle, including from other parts of the world, either sit tightly on their nest until the danger level becomes too high or attack ferociously at the potential threat.[7][101][126] The nestling is careful tended to by female, as she is at the nest 82% of the time up to the time the eaglet is 10 days in one Kenya study, her attendance thence drops to 47% from 10–20 days, then after 30 days, dropped to about 5% and from 60 days about 1%.[10][7] When the young is at later stages of maturity, the female tends to only engage in very brief prey deliveries.[10][7] Both sexes bring prey and feed the young though the male takes a bigger share of this than in many eagles.[10][7] After 30 days, the eaglet is often left by itself on the nest throughout the night.[10] The eaglet is fed nearly every day early on but only every 2–3 days later on, especially after leaving the nest.[10]

Breeding success and failures edit

It is estimated that the bateleur produces a mean of 0.47 chicks per nest per year.[127] In East Africa, the bateleur tends not to breed every year and the replacement rate is about 0.5 per annum.[10] In southern Africa, the bateleur typically breeds every year whether or not they are successful in raising their eaglet.[7] At 4 nests in Zimbabwe, a replacement rate of 0.81 young per pair per annum, with local figures often being higher where they live more free from human disturbance. It was found that Zimbabwe failures were only known to be from infertile or lost eggs.[7][34] In Kruger National Park, the predation of Verreaux's eagle-owls may considerably lower nesting success.[7] Furthermore in Kruger, it was found that 33% of the population of bateleurs were young birds while the remaining 67% were adults, meaning that younger birds are presumably underpopulated.[70] Elsewhere, even lower numbers, around 25-30%, of the population is young bateleurs.[10] The population, or at least in southern Africa, seems to be roughly even in terms of sex ratio, with an even number of males and females.[10][70] In the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, 13 pairs of bateleurs were recorded to produce only 0.33 young per pair. There was evidence of a 13% decline in active nesting territories of bateleurs in the Kalahari Gemsbok area during the seven year study, and at least a 40% decline over the previous 10 years. Vacated nesting territories were not reoccupied by the species. There was found to be seemingly no safe buffer zone around the park, due perhaps to persecution in the adjacent farmlands, when potential mortality of foraging bateleur from the protected park enter these areas, as well as nesting site disturbance, could have been part of the reason for this decline. Poisoned and suspected poisoned bateleurs have been found in the Park during the study period.[9] The few that survive their early years may expect a mean estimated lifespan of around 12–14 years and in some cases may manage to live as long as 27 years.[10][6] The annual adult survival rate is estimated at 95%, while the annual juvenile survival rate is estimated at 75%.[6]

Conservation edit

 
A bateleur in "heraldic" pose.

Bateleurs are a wide ranging species but have shown rather strong declines.[1][5] Per estimates from the 1990s, extrapolated from an average of 150 km2 (58 sq mi) per pair, it was projected that the total population could have been around 180,000 birds including young ones.[5] However, it is likely that the species numbers far lower than that.[13] Currently, the IUCN estimates broadly from 10,000 to 100,000 total individuals.[1] The numbers in Southern Africa have shown the most dramatic and drastic known reductions.[13] At one time, the species numbers at 2000-2500 pairs in the former Transvaal Province alone which was down to around 420 to 470 pairs by the 1990s.[5][99] More recently it was estimated that there are less than 700 pairs in the entire region of Southern Africa, although that number may be too excessively conservative.[13][63][128] In all the bateleur has declined by an estimated 75% in Southern Africa.[129] The species is considered threatened in Zimbabwe, Namibia, Eswatini and South Africa and still considered not uncommon but probably declining in Malawi, Zambia, Mozambique and Botswana.[51][53][52][56][130][131] Declines are not endemic to Southern Africa for bateleurs, with declines strongly detected as well in Ivory Coast and Sudan.[129] Addition countries that have reported strongly declining numbers are in Togo, Niger and Nigeria.[40][132][133] Where bateleurs were once common in road surveys in Central-West Africa, none were detected in newer road surveys from the 2000s in the same areas.[134] Claims of an increase in potential numbers of bateleur in Uganda are not verified.[48]

Decline of the species and the reduction in range is suspected to have been moderately rapid over the past three generations. Generally, throughout the range, the bateleur is considered much more common in protected areas.[13][129] However even in several protected areas, numbers of bateleurs seem to decreasing.[135][136] The declines of the species are almost entirely due to anthropogenic causes.[5][13] These include but are not limited to habitat destruction, the poisoning of carcasses, persecution through shooting and possibly pesticide use.[5][137] Poisoning of carcasses is a major issue for scavenging animals, especially birds like vultures, in Africa.[138][139] Zambian bateleurs may suffer from deliberate poisonings as well as those in Eswatini, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Mozambique. The bateleur's wide foraging areas and their ability to locate very small pieces of carrion, makes them highly susceptible to poison-laced carcasses even from a small proportion of farmers who use poisons. Bateleurs and other eagles are not usually the direct target of these poisoning operations, which in some cases may be directed to unfavored mammals like jackals or in other cases directed towards vultures by poachers to hide their illegal wildlife killings.[13][51][54][63][139] The decline of South African bateleurs is primarily linked with poisonings, primarily from large-scale farming operations.[79][140][141] It is possible that bateleurs may suffer from the effects of DDT though it is found in a small sample of 3 eggs from South Africa that they evidenced low subcritical levels of DDT metabolites, probably not enough to effect overall populations.[5][129] However, it is projected that pesticide use may be harming populations in Zambia as well as in Botswana.[53][51] Ongoing persecution is both serious and unsustainable, beyond poisoning, such killings are known to extent to ongoing shooting and trapping.[1][13][129] Some trapping occurs of the species for its feathers which are used in medicine by traditional healers for predicting future events[61] Less well known but probably occurring declines may be due to flying into manmade objects including wire collisions, reservoir drownings and road-killings.[142] Additionally, shrinking habitat has been found to be a prevalent threat to bateleurs due largely to expanding human settlements and intensifying livestock agriculture.[13][63] A further effect from humans is regular disturbance at bateleur nests, although not typically as deliberate as many other threats, this is causing the breeding success rates to plummet farther.[7][13][129] No large scale actions are underway but they are possibly protected in Yemen as an endangered species.[23] It is proposed to implement education and awareness campaigns across its range to reduce the use of poisoned baits. Regular population monitoring is being carried out.[143]

Heraldic and mythological status edit

The bateleur plays a prominent role in African heraldic and mythological cultures probably due to its spectacular colours and conspicuous and bold behaviour.[10][34] As a result it is likely that the bateleur is the basis for the "Zimbabwe Bird" which has been prominent since ancient times in Zimbabwean culture and continuously used in heraldic forms including most prominently being featured on the Zimbabwe flag.[144][145] A South African myth was that when bateleurs "cries in flight, the rain will fall".[146] The admiration and mythologizing of bateleurs is also known in other areas beyond Zimbabwe, including among those in Southern Africa who speak Tswana language as well as elsewhere dating back to the Iron Age with various with the bateleur variously known as kgwadira and petleke, and may often in mythology may fulfill the role intelligent servant to their masters, which were considered vultures.[147][148] In East and Central Africa, the bateleur has been referred to variously as gawarakko and nkona and in the Lake Tanganyika was considered an essential possession of sultans whether the birds were dead or alive.[149][150]

Media edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Bateleur - Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds.

bateleur, this, article, about, species, bird, other, uses, disambiguation, bateleur, ɜːr, ɜːr, terathopius, ecaudatus, medium, sized, eagle, family, accipitridae, often, considered, relative, snake, eagles, like, them, classified, within, subfamily, circaetin. This article is about the species of bird For other uses see Bateleur disambiguation The bateleur ˌ b ae t e ˈ l ɜːr ˈ b ae t el ɜːr 2 Terathopius ecaudatus is a medium sized eagle in the family Accipitridae It is often considered a relative of the snake eagles and like them it is classified within the subfamily Circaetinae 3 It is the only member of the genus Terathopius and may be the origin of the Zimbabwe Bird the national emblem of Zimbabwe 4 Adult bateleurs are generally black in colour with a chestnut colour on the mantle as well as also on the rump and tail Adults also have gray patches about the leading edges of the wings extending to the secondaries in females with bright red on their cere and their feet Adults also show white greater coverts contrasting with black remiges in males gray patches on the underwing primaries and black wingtips The juvenile bateleur is quite different being largely drab brown with a bit of paler feather scaling All bateleurs have extremely large heads for their size rather small bills large feet relatively short legs long bow like wings and uniquely short tails which are much smaller still on adults compared to juvenile birds 5 6 Bateleur Conservation status Endangered IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Accipitriformes Family Accipitridae Subfamily Circaetinae Genus TerathopiusLesson 1830 Species T ecaudatus Binomial name Terathopius ecaudatus Daudin 1800 approximate breeding range This species is native to broad areas of Sub Saharan Africa and scarcely up into Arabia It is characteristically a bird of somewhat open habitats such as savanna with some trees present and open dry woodland 5 It is in life history a rather peculiar bird of prey with a free wheeling generalist diet that includes much carrion but also tends to hunt a wide range of live prey including many small to unexpectedly relatively large mammals and reptiles along with generally relatively small birds 7 Bateleurs are highly aerial birds that spend much time soaring and will frequently fly with exaggerated embellishments perhaps when excited or angered 8 They tend to build a relatively small if sturdy stick nest in a large tree and lay only a single egg 5 Despite being a rather aggressive bird in other contexts bateleurs are easily flushed from their own nest making them exceptionally vulnerable to nest predators including humans and nest failures 9 It may take as long as 7 to 8 years to attain full maturity perhaps the longest stretch to maturity of any raptor 5 7 This species has long been known to be declining rather pronouncedly in overall population and it is mostly confined to protected areas today 10 11 12 Currently the IUCN classifies the bateleur as an Endangered species due primarily to anthropogenic causes such as habitat destruction pesticide usage and persecution 1 Contents 1 Taxonomy and etymology 2 Description 2 1 Size 2 2 Identification 2 3 Vocalizations 3 Distribution and habitat 3 1 Habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Nomadism and dispersals 4 2 Thermoregulation 5 Dietary biology 5 1 Interspecific predatory relationships 6 Breeding 6 1 Nests 6 2 Eggs and development of young 6 3 Parental behaviour 6 4 Breeding success and failures 7 Conservation 8 Heraldic and mythological status 9 Media 10 References 11 External linksTaxonomy and etymology editThe bateleur has been found to be a proper member of the subfamily Circaetinae commonly called snake or serpent eagles via a variety of genetic studies 13 Given the outward similarities of the bateleur to snake eagles the relationship has long been inferred by authors 10 In particular the bateleur was suggested to have their closest living relations in the similarly large Circaetus snake eagles 3 14 This relationship was well borne out by a genetic study that found that this species and the short toed snake eagle Circaetus gallicus form a monophyletic clade based on nucleotide sequences in the cytochrome b gene 15 Even though when contrasted with snake eagles bateleurs appear to differ greatly in plumage patterns the two genera show certain similarities in food feeding behavior and breeding biology 13 However Lerner and Mindell 2005 based on the molecular sequence from two mitochondrial genes and one nuclear intron indicated a previously unsuspected close relationship of the bateleur with similarly aberrant but extremely different in nearly every respect of appearance and life history member of the Circaetinae the Philippine eagle Pithecophaga jefferyi 16 Chromosome banding studies have also found a relatively recent genetic relationship of the bateleurs with the Old World vultures 17 The common name of Bateleur is French for street performer 18 Meanwhile the scientific name is from name teras Greek for marvelous ops Greek for face e Latin for without caudatus Latin tail 7 The bird was given its common name by Francois Levaillant a French naturalist and explorer 7 The original scientific name was Falco ecaudatus given by Francois Marie Daudin as the concept of disparate genera between birds of prey was devised later on nor were falcons then known to be unrelated to many other variety of diurnal birds of prey 19 Description edit nbsp Close up of head nbsp A captive immature bateleur The bateleur is of note for its unique morphology and plumage with some anatomical similarities to both snake eagles and vultures The species has a thick neck and a very large rather conspicuously cowled head with a proportionately short bill albeit one covered with a very large cere The cowl is also present on snake eagles but in those it is less dramatically apparent 5 7 The other features in perched adult bateleurs are rather oddly stumpy such as the short legs and exceptionally short tail possibly the shortest proportionately of all raptors 20 Its posture while perched is extremely upright making them look like quite a tall raptor on the ground despite its rather short legs Even while perched the body tends to be dominated by their exceptionally large wings which possess some 25 secondary feathers perhaps more than any other raptor 5 The adult bateleur usually has a chestnut coloration along the mantle back rump and tail including the undertail coverts The adult male bateleur is predominantly black with grey shoulders which appear edged with white when freshly moulted The adult female differs by having grey brown not black on the greater coverts and black tipped grey not black secondaries Furthermore up to 7 of adults have a cream morph where they have chestnut tails but the other chestnut areas are almost fully replaced by cream to pale brown coloring The cream morph may reportedly be slightly more prevalent in drier areas 5 13 21 The bare parts of adult bateleurs are exceptionally conspicuous with the adult cere bare facial skin and feet all being rather bright red however in some they can also temporarily fade to pink pale pink or yellowish at times such as when they are perching in the shade or bathing The bare parts flush the most red during times of excitement The bill itself is black with a yellow centre and red base The eyes are dark brown 5 The juvenile is very distinct from the adults of the species Juveniles of the bateleur have a longer tail than mature birds They furthermore have essentially all brown coloring with dull rufous to creamy edging apparent on some areas The head of the juvenile bateleur is paler and tawnier than elsewhere on its body while the eyes are brown the cere a rather unique greenish blue and the feet whitish in colour 5 22 23 At as late as 2 3 years of age the immature bateleur is still much the same in appearance as the juvenile but by the fourth year becomes more sooty brown with sexual dimorphism already evidenced by the more extensive dark wing markings of males In the 5th year the plumage may show the first signs of chestnut and the grey colour about back and shoulders tend to manifest Also from 3 5 years old the cere and feet turn yellow then to dull pink By the sixth and seventh years of life the plumage of subadult bateleurs blackens and the chestnut portions of the plumage increase The shoulders become fully grey by the 8th year the likely age of maturity 5 24 As for the bare parts in juvenile bateleurs the cere and facial skin are a distinct pale grey blue to green blue The juvenile s feet are greenish white to greyish white at 4 5 the cere facial skin and feet turn yellow then pink before finally reddening The eyes are similar in hue to those of adult bateleurs but are a slightly lighter being more honey brown while the bill of juveniles are mainly pale grey blue in colour 5 7 nbsp Adult female bateleurs show more grey to the wing than males In flight the bateleur appears as a rather large raptor with disproportionately elongated rather narrow and slightly bow shaped wings which appear pinched in at the bases broad across the secondaries and regularly narrow pointed and upturned at the tips Upon sighting the wings often catch the eye before the large head which is proportionately slightly bigger even than their cousins the snake eagles 5 25 The tail is so short in adult bateleurs that the feet extend below the tail tip almost giving the impression that the raptor nearly has no tail 5 20 This is as opposed to juveniles where the feet come up about 5 cm 2 0 in short of the tail tip with the feet coming to exceed the tail which is shrinking via moults in length around the 5th year of maturation 5 7 The adult bateleur s wingspan is an extraordinary 2 9 times greater than its total length 5 The adult male bateleur is mostly black above with a chestnut back and tail and grey forewings below he is black on the body contrasting with a chestnut tail as well as with the white wing linings and black flight feathers except for the greyish based primaries The adult female bateleur is similar in plumage to the male overall but differs in her black tipped grey secondaries above and more extensively white underwings with the black on the female confined to the wingtips and trailing edges 5 20 The juvenile bateleur on the wing appears broader winged and especially longer tailed with a largely uniform brown coloration including the greater coverts with paler feather mainly about the head as well as on the flight feathers 5 Size edit The bateleur is a mid sized eagle and large raptor It is likely the second heaviest of the Circaetinae subfamily of accipitrids By far the largest of the subfamily is the Philippine eagle which is more than twice as massive and is far larger in all aspects of measurement than the bateleur with a drastically differing structure broad relatively short wings very long legs and tail One traditional snake eagle the brown snake eagle Circaetus cinereus rivals the bateleur in most aspects of size including body mass but possesses a rather longer tail and slightly shorter but broader wings Additionally the widespread and slightly broader winged short toed snake eagle and proportionately long and slender winged black breasted snake eagle Circaetus pectoralis can be nearly as large in wingspan as the bateleur but tend to be somewhat less heavy 5 3 26 The total length of the bateleur is 55 to 70 cm 22 to 28 in 27 Typical length of a full grown bird is around 63 5 cm 25 0 in 28 29 The wingspan of bateleurs can vary from 168 to 190 cm 5 ft 6 in to 6 ft 3 in 5 Body mass of bateleurs can vary from 1 800 to 3 000 g 4 0 to 6 6 lb 30 One sample of 10 unsexed bateleurs weighed an average of 2 200 g 4 9 lb while a smaller sample of three weighed an average of 2 392 g 5 273 lb 26 31 Additionally a median body mass of 2 385 g 5 258 lb was cited in one study 32 The bateleur evidences some sexual dimorphism in favour of the female as is expected in raptorial birds but this size difference is fairly minimal relative to many other accipitrids averaging up to about 6 5 Among standard measurements males have a wing chord length of 476 to 553 mm 18 7 to 21 8 in while that of the female is 530 to 559 mm 20 9 to 22 0 in In tail length adult males measure 98 to 124 mm 3 9 to 4 9 in and can be even shorter in adult females at 105 to 113 mm 4 1 to 4 4 in in some cases the adult s tail may reportedly measure as short as 72 mm 2 8 in This contrasts with the tail of juvenile bateleurs which measures 142 to 172 mm 5 6 to 6 8 in The tarsus can measure from 67 to 75 mm 2 6 to 3 0 in in males and 72 to 75 mm 2 8 to 3 0 in in females Unsexed adult bateleurs in Tsavo East National Park were found to average 513 mm 20 2 in in wing chord length 34 5 mm 1 36 in with a range of 28 6 to 38 mm 1 13 to 1 50 in in culmen length and a relatively small hind claw length of 30 6 mm 1 20 in While the hind or hallux claw is usually the most enlarged in most species of accipitrid on the other hand in the Tsavo East bateleurs unusually the middle claw on the front of the foot was slightly larger at 32 mm 1 3 in Notably the proportions of bateleurs are similar to snake eagles with robust feet with rough thick skin and short talons the bateleur in particular having very thick large toes structurally almost like those of a big owl and very sharp talons reminiscent in sharpness of highly predaceous larger African raptors Further like snake eagles bateleurs have a rather large headed but with a smallish beak coupled with a large gape These adaptations generally equip the subfamily to better handle and ingest snakes relative to other accipitrids 5 33 34 35 Identification edit nbsp The practically unmistakable form of a bateleur in flight The bateleur particularly in its adult plumage is often considered one of the most distinctive raptors in the world 36 When perched or flying adults or older immatures are quite unmistakable 5 The bateleur can be readily be distinguished even by inexperienced observers from the very differently shaped and usually rather smaller bodied and winged augur buzzards Buteo augur and jackal buzzards Buteo rufofuscus These do not overlap with bateleurs in nearly all respects of morphology proportions nor flight actions Nonetheless both of these buzzards are sometimes mistaken for bateleurs due to their own combinations of black white and chestnut which are completely differently composed than those of the bateleur 5 20 25 Despite how distinctive the buzzards are from the bateleur some reports of bateleurs from areas where they are currently gone are almost certain to have been misidentified jackal buzzards 7 Juveniles and immatures of up to 2 3 years old are hardly less distinctive in shape but could be confused largely due to similar proportions of their large head brown plumage and whitish legs with certain snake eagles The brown snake eagle is perhaps the most similar to the juvenile bateleur but it has yellow eyes longer legs much broader shorter and differently shaped wings with the tips of wings reaching its banded tail 5 7 Even the black chested and the rather slight Beaudouin s snake eagle Circaetus beaudouinii are sometimes considered potentially confusable with juvenile bateleurs but both of these respective species are rather uniform and darker brown ventrally and about the head and much paler dorsally with a highly different contrasting whitish cream colour below 5 Vocalizations edit Bateleurs are usually silent for much of the year 5 The main call uttered whether perched or in aerial display or when pirating from other raptors is a far carrying loud raucous schaaaa aw They may too vocalize in a similar manner during courtship Alternatively bateleur calls may consist of resonant barking calls kow aw The barking call can be accompanied by half spread wings and jerking of the body up and down or may too be uttered in flight the latter in a similar manner to that of a fish eagle 5 10 Distraction display are sometimes accompanied by subdued barking chatter ka ka ka ka 5 34 A not dissimilar call of kau kau kau koaagh koaggh has been described as given by perched birds 10 Other softer calls are uttered when perched near the nest 5 The young of the bateleur tend to engage harsh squealing call is kyup kyup keeaw keeaw usually as a hunger call at approach of parent with food Also the species young may make a melodious twip call 10 34 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp A savannah bateleur in Benin The bateleur occupies a very large range through mainly sub Saharan Africa 5 37 The species resides in West Africa from southern Mauritania to Senegal The Gambia Guinea Bissau Guinea the northern portions of Sierra Leone Ivory Coast and much of Ghana through western Burkina Faso much of Togo and Benin and northern and central Nigeria 1 38 39 40 It is possibly extinct in Mauritania range restricted in Guinea mainly to Kiang West and Liberia but is still locally common where good habitat remains elsewhere in this region 41 42 Similarly far north a rare population is believed to persist out of Africa in extreme southwestern Saudi Arabia and western Yemen 43 44 In central and east Africa the bateleur may be found in northern Cameroon southern Niger southern Chad southern Sudan South Sudan northern Central African Republic Eritrea Ethiopia Djibouti western Somalia northern eastern and southern Democratic Republic of the Congo and a majority of Uganda Kenya and Tanzania 45 46 47 48 49 In Southern Africa the bateleur is found quite widely being found almost throughout where habitat is favorable Angola Zambia Zimbabwe Malawi and Mozambique Additionally they may range Botswana in all but southernmost portion also being found still in northern and eastern Namibia and northwestern South Africa where its range has contracted considerably from as far south once as the Cape Province to almost entirely to being found exclusively within protected areas north of the Orange River excepting a portion of Kruger National Park 13 50 51 52 53 54 55 The species is possibly extirpated from Eswatini in southern Africa 56 The bateleur is regarded as a vagrant in the countries of Tunisia Cyprus and rarely Egypt Israel and Iraq 5 57 58 In April 2012 a juvenile bateleur was seen in Algeciras in southern Spain 59 In 2015 and 2022 juveniles spotted as far north as Black Sea coast of Turkey in the cities of Istanbul and Sinop respectively 60 Habitat edit nbsp An adult and juvenile in characteristic savanna habitat in Botswana The bateleur is a common to fairly common resident or nomadic 23 bird of the partially open savanna country and of woodland within Sub Saharan Africa 5 38 During breeding it tends to require closed canopy savannah woodland habitats including Acacia savanna as well as mopane and miombo woodlands They may too acclimate to thornveld and overall various fairly shrubby areas 5 7 53 It tends to rarely occur in heavily forested and mountainous habitats However while the species can forage extensively in largely treeless habitats such as treeless savanna but is nearly as rare in pure desert lacking arborescent growth as it is in tropical rainforests 61 Bateleurs are seldom to be found around extensive wetlands but may regularly be found near watering holes 5 Although often in fairly dry savanna habitats in Kenya it is reportedly absent from areas where the rainfall is under 250 mm 9 8 in annually probably because it limits the growth of the leafy trees that they require for nesting 62 In Ethiopia it tends to be associated with well wooded areas 46 Habitat tends to be most closely studied in southern Africa 6 It is mostly common found in broad leaved woodland in the Okavango Delta in Botswana In Namibia it is often found over tall woodland near drainage lines and over ephemeral rivers in north eastern Namibia and within the more arid Etosha National Park 61 In Zambia it is found in a variety of habitats from woodlands to open plains but avoids the most densely wooded areas 51 Reportedly in Malawi it is often associated with Forest savanna mosaics but is sometimes regularly seen over cultivated areas and even may be seen flying over large cities 52 To the contrary in Mozambique it is said to avoid areas with a dense human population 63 The species can occur from sea level up to 4 500 m 14 800 ft but not normally a mountain dwelling species and mainly occurs below 3 000 m 9 800 ft 5 This is supported in Zimbabwe where the bateleur is relatively common but appears to largely avoid the extensive amount of hilly and rugged areas present in that country 54 Behaviour edit nbsp A juvenile bateleur flying while carrying a bird s foot in its mouth This bateleur is unusually conspicuous due to its propensity for gliding flights over favorable habitats in much of Africa 7 The bird spends a considerable amount of time on the wing particularly in low altitude flights 64 Due to the conspicuous behaviour and colorful plumage the bateleur is frequently described in superlatives such as one of the most beautiful and spectacular things that flies 10 This species tends to take off with unusually fast shallow beats for a bird of this relative large size 5 After take off the bateleur sails at a mean speed of about 50 to 60 km h 31 to 37 mph They often rock from side to side with the wings held in a strong dihedral with very limiting flapping vaguely recalling the flight of the American turkey vulture Cathares aura although the flight is generally more forceful fast and acrobatic than that species and at times can be evocative of a huge falcon 65 66 Although the species tends to fly fairly low bateleurs can soar and circle quite high as well 5 10 20 Engaged in its aforementioned dihedral flight it is often cants continuously from side to side likely the origin of which it was given its common name loosely tumbler balancer or tightrope walker of French derivation 10 Various flying embellishments may be undertaken nearly aseasonally 5 34 Although not typically given to forward somersault nor to loop the loop bateleurs may with some regularity perform a rapid 360 degrees sideways roll 10 They are often given to flying with more embellishments when in the presence of another bateleur even with juveniles provoking one another entirely uncoupled seemingly from breeding courtship or territorial displays 5 Typical home ranges of around 40 km2 15 sq mi were reported per pair in Kruger National Park and these were considered unusually small by overall species standards 5 Intruders to whom this behaviour is displayed always submit and submission is shown by retreating to a safe upper boundary elevation Males and females both display this behaviour in all stages of the breeding cycle This behaviour is mainly shown to members of the same sex and particularly to non adults as it is thought that they may have a greater ability to take over another bird s territory having greater competitive ability for limited food resources 8 The bateleur is generally a solitary bird However juveniles may accompany one or both parents for about three months and loose congregations of as many as 40 50 or more have been record of mainly immatures These tend to be aggregations of otherwise unassociated immature bateleurs attracted to rich feeding areas such as newly discovered carrion bush fires recently burnt areas or temporary floods and occasionally by termite emergences 3 5 In the wild bateleurs are shy of man and sensitive to disturbance at the nest easily abandoning the structure 67 In captivity however they become unusually tame 68 Bateleur eagles are among a group of raptors that secrete a clear salty fluid from their nares whilst eating According to Schmidt Nielson s 1964 hypothesis this is due to the general necessity for birds to use an extrarenal mechanism of salt secretion to aid water reabsorption 69 Nomadism and dispersals edit Generally as in most raptors found as breeding residents in Africa the bateleur is considered sedentary and territorial but it is a species that requires very large home ranges 5 However in general the species neither as staunchly residential nor sedentary as many other Sub Saharan African raptors 34 70 Both immature and sometimes adult bateleurs are considered clearly nomadic 5 71 At times the bateleur is even regarded as an irruptive or local migrant 13 72 Some regular north to south movements may occur in West Africa and may occur transequatorially in East Africa to avoid heavy rains 5 In Kruger immatures are driven out by adults on territory during the breeding season and then often wander widely before returning for the non breeding season 5 Recoveries of juveniles in southern Africa show that individuals have been recovered at assorted distances from their nests of origin ranging from as far as 30 to 285 km 19 to 177 mi away It was noted that in some cases heavier rainfall may have caused farther afield dispersals 73 Thermoregulation edit nbsp Bateleur sunbathing by a waterhole Bateleurs seem to devote an exceptional amount of time to thermoregulation frequently spending much of its day variously sunning to warm up and bathing to cool off 34 These eagles are frequently seen to enter water bodies for a bath and then open their wings to often sunbathe Standing upright and holding their wings straight out to the sides and tipped vertically a classic phoenix pose as they turn to follow the sun 74 Bateleurs will stand on the ground with their wings spread exposing the feathers to direct sunlight warming the oils in the feathers The bird will then spread the oils with its beak to improve its aerodynamics In some countries local nicknames of the species may include as the Conifer eagle or Pine eagle due to its feathers resembling a conifer cone when fluffed up and engaging in thermoregulatory behaviour 75 76 77 At times this is described as a striking heraldic posture 7 Bateleurs may also be seen praying allowing ants to crawl over the wings and feathers collecting bits of food dead feather and skin material When covered in ants the bateleur then ruffles its feathers startling the ants which react by secreting formic acid as self defence This in turn kills the ticks and fleas possibly ridding the host of its parasites 78 Dietary biology edit nbsp A bateleur feeding on a hare The bateleur is a dietary generalist This species generally forages from the flight flying mostly low and straight whilst scanning the ground periodically banking and retracing sections of the track when possible foods are spotted Their hunting range can be truly enormous ranging in some cases up to 55 to 200 km2 21 to 77 sq mi 5 23 Bateleurs may spend up to 8 9 hours or up to 80 of daylight on the wing perhaps largely for hunting and foraging purposes and have reported having even covered as much as 300 to 500 km 190 to 310 mi in a single day 5 When potential prey or food is spotted they then descend in tight spirals to check it out 5 The bateleur is a very effective discoverer of carrion at all times and often is the first to come to large carcasses or roadkills 5 13 Juveniles appear to attend large carrion much more than adults and dietary studies appear to support that carrion is rather more significant to the foods of juvenile and immature bateleurs compared to adults 5 7 33 Despite an aptitude for scavenging descriptions of this eagle as not a very rapacious species are erroneous as it has been found to a highly powerful predator for its size and one that is often rather active at pursuing living prey with seemingly most food consumed during the breeding season being prey that the bateleur has itself killed 10 7 33 Bateleurs kill most prey on the ground with a steep stoop on partially closed wings On the evidence they may alter their stoop onto prey with a slow drop with raised wings rather in a gentle descent like a parachute largely when taking slower moving prey such as some reptiles 5 7 79 80 Additionally they can also take birds on the wing 79 As occasional kleptoparasites they sometimes aerially pirate foods from other raptors Alternately they may try to intercept other raptors kills while the raptor is feeding on them whether it be on the ground in a tree or on a rock or even immediately after the kill is made 5 7 These piratical attacks are sometimes carried out against large carrion eaters like vultures and even against larger eagles and in them they may drive their target to the ground with interlocking talons or trading shallow blows with their feet 7 79 Bateleurs also hunt insects by walking on the ground particularly after grassfires and will patrol for small carcasses alongside roads 5 Bateleurs forage almost entirely based on opportunity and have no particular specialization on any particular prey type 7 As a result a wide prey spectrum has been reported with around 160 prey species known they thus rival martial eagles Polemaetus bellicosus and perhaps just slightly behind tawny eagles Aquila rapax as the most diversified feeder known among African eagles 7 6 33 79 Among their prey mammals birds and reptiles roughly in that order seem to be considerably preferred over other prey taxa 7 79 Based on morphology their long middle toes have been cited as an indication that they originally diversified to become a bird eater but a rather small degree of sexual dimorphism between males and females indicates a preference for mammal eating 5 81 82 By the most complete picture of the bateleurs diet was a compilation study that compiled 1879 prey items from differing parts of the range 79 In it was found that bateleurs derived 54 6 of the diet from mammals with perhaps two thirds to about half of the diet being mammalian carrion along with 23 7 of the diet being from birds 17 8 from reptiles 1 9 from fish 1 8 from invertebrates and an extremely small amount about 0 2 of amphibian food 79 Predominantly within the compilation study preys were unidentified to species with 58 4 of the carrion sources 26 9 of live mammals genera or families and 22 2 of birds unidentified to species 79 nbsp The markedly rough large and short clawed foot of a captive adult bateleur Differing study areas show differing prey results for bateleurs 7 79 In a woodland based study of nesting birds in Zimbabwe 175 prey items were found for bateleurs with the diet seemingly dominated by prey appearing to be taken alive and relatively large prey at that The primary prey in the study were found to be scrub hare Lepus saxatilis at 26 3 of the prey by number Cape hyrax Procavia capensis at 10 3 Gambian pouched rat Cricetomys gambianus 6 85 brown greater galago Otolemur crassicaudatus 6 28 and helmeted guineafowl Numida meleagris 4 57 83 In the more hilly rocky country of Zimbabwe seemingly live prey was also preferred but a stronger prevalence of birds was detected among the 249 prey items In this study the main prey were scrub hares 22 8 unidentified doves 10 glossy starlings 6 72 other small birds of around 100 g 3 5 oz 6 69 crested guineafowls Guttera pucherani 5 43 and unidentified mammals 5 02 84 In Kruger National Park a much stronger preference for likely or verified carrion was detected in the bateleur s breeding season diet Here 731 food items in thornveld type habitat and 341 prey items in savanna type habitat were reviewed It was estimated 31 6 of the diet was carrion was from medium sized antelopes of around 20 to 40 kg 44 to 88 lb in weight followed by small carrion sources of around 8 to 15 kg 18 to 33 lb to somewhat larger carrion from 54 kg 119 lb impala Aepyceros melampus Beyond carrion the Kruger food study found that 16 4 of the total diet consisted of unidentified live mammals 3 73 each by assorted dove species and lilac breasted rollers Coracias caudatus 3 by glossy starlings and 1 6 by skinks 79 Further variation was found in the diet farther north in Tsavo East National Park in Kenya Of 139 prey items from the nest areas of 2 pairs mostly live prey predominated again here led by Kirk s dik diks Madoqua kirkii at 19 42 unidentified snakes at 18 7 cape hares at 4 3 Crocidura shrews at 3 59 ungulate carrion at 3 59 Streptopelia doves at 3 59 common dwarf mongoose Helogale parvula at 2 87 and red crested korhaan Lophotis ruficrista at 2 87 33 Without statistics Cangandala National Park in Angola the prey species reported at nests included brown greater galago greater cane rat Thryonomys swinderianus Gambian pouched rat and unidentified hares 50 Unfortunately detailed dietary studies have only been conducted in southern and eastern Africa and details of the diet are unknown elsewhere however it is assumed the species is a generalist and opportunist throughout its range 85 nbsp Juvenile bateleur with avian prey In general a picture emerges that the primary food sources of bateleurs are live taken medium sized mammals carrion of generally larger mammal species rather smallish bird prey and a small diversity of reptiles 7 34 79 When selecting mammals small prey such as rodents and shrews are by no means neglected but a preference for relatively large rodents tends to be found 7 These may consist of assorted mice gerbils and dormice to ground squirrels bush squirrels and vlei rats to very large rodents such as Gambian pouched rats greater and lesser cane rat Thryonomys gregorianus and South African springhares Pedetes capensis although certainly any consumption of adult Cape porcupine Hystrix africaeaustralis is derived from carrion 7 34 33 79 86 Additionally most African species of hare as well as more secondarily hedgehogs and elephant shrews and a variety of smallish carnivorous mammals 7 79 84 87 88 The latter may include live prey species including several species of mongoose from dwarf to banded mongoose Mungos mungo and Selous s mongoose Paracynictis selousi both about the same body mass as a bateleur and at least four species of genets as well as striped polecats Ictonyx striatus 34 79 84 87 89 Over 30 mammal species have been identified as foods for bateleurs exclusive from carrion including various larger food species with carrion of ungulates ranging in size from that of Sharpe s grysbok Raphicerus sharpei to African buffalo Syncerus caffer and the carrion of carnivorans from the size of jackals to that of lions Panthera leo 79 80 In compilation studies the most often fed on ungulates by bateleurs that were identified to species were reported to be impala and steenbok Raphicerus campestris at 4 2 and 2 2 of the total foods respectively 79 80 Bateleurs have been reported to opportunistically scavenge on human remains as was reportedly witnessed during the South African Border War 7 Outside of galagos among primate foods most monkeys observed in the diet such as baboons and vervet monkeys Chlorocebus pygerythrus are thought to be largely scavenged as carrion 79 80 However studies of king colobus Colobus polykomos and Angola colobus Colobus angolensis in Central and southeastern Africa both where few details are known of bateleurs diets it was mentioned bateleurs may be a potential predator of troops based on the anti predator activity and vocalizations of these species provoked by bateleurs 90 91 The bateleur using its large powerful feet does not shy away from very large prey and has been known to regularly kill mammals heavier than itself including scrub hare estimated to weigh 2 600 g 5 7 lb springhares estimated to weigh 3 000 g 6 6 lb Cape hyrax estimated to weigh 3 800 g 8 4 lb Kirk s dik diks estimated to weigh 4 000 g 8 8 lb and greater cane rats estimated to weigh 4 500 g 9 9 lb 33 79 Even more impressive mammalian kills have been suspected with instances where reportedly adults black backed jackals Canis mesomelas honey badgers Mellivora capensis and aardwolf Protelas cristatus any of which may weigh around twice the aforementioned large mammal prey for bateleurs may have been unexpectedly killed by bateleurs 13 33 80 Furthermore an instance of attempted predation in Tanzania on an adult honey badger was witnessed ending with both the bateleur and badger dying from the ensuing fight 92 nbsp Male at Maasai Mara with a coqui francolin kill In all a considerable diversity of birds may be taken by bateleurs perhaps around 80 species being known in their prey spectrum 7 6 79 They often focus on rather small if normally live caught birds compared to other eagles of a similar size 7 79 Bateleurs may show a special liking for pigeons and doves as prey although only about a half dozen have been identified to species Doves usually of the genus Streptopelia were found to be the most prominent avian prey in compilation studies accounting for 17 6 of known avian prey and 4 25 of the total foods in several large bateleur food studies 7 23 79 93 Much other similar avian prey commonly those weighing around 80 to 300 g 2 8 to 10 6 oz including a surprising diversity of nightjars perhaps since they are prone to end up as roadkill due to their predilection for resting on roads by night and shorebirds like lapwings other plovers sandpipers and terns in addition to kingfishers up to the size of the giant kingfisher Megaceryle maxima rollers hoopoes small hornbills parakeets and some passerines usually those with a conspicuous presence on the savanna such as shrikes weavers and starlings 7 34 33 46 79 84 94 95 96 Unlike many other eagles of similar or larger size there are few instances of waterfowl or large waders i e heron storks flamingoes etc falling prey to bateleurs although at least one African spoonbill Platalea alba was recorded as bateleur prey 7 79 80 The largest typical avian prey tends to be assorted gamebirds with most common guineafowl spurfowl and francolin smaller available species of bustard and some quail known in their diet The largest of these avian prey species attacked by bateleurs top out around 1 200 to 1 800 g 2 6 to 4 0 lb 7 34 33 79 84 The reason for the disinterest in mid sized to large avian prey of sizes comparable to some mammals and reptiles are known to have been taken by bateleurs is not clear as the bateleur does not in general appear to shy away from difficult to capture birds nor to large and dangerous prey of other animal classes 34 79 84 nbsp A bateleur depicted killing a young jackal The bateleur was once reported to be a very common predator of reptiles like their cousins the snake eagles 7 Although this is somewhat erroneous bateleurs do not infrequently include reptiles in their diet 79 As much as 30 of the diet can be reptilian mainly snakes 6 33 79 Some reptiles taken are small and innocuous such as a few species of plated lizards and a few species of colubrid snakes 6 79 However like their cousins the bateleur does not seem to shy away from venomous snakes nor other large or formidable reptiles They have been known to take puff adder Bitis arietans boomslangs Dispholidus typus Egyptian cobras Naja haje and unidentified mambas with the latter actually reported to be the most prominent known reptile prey in compilation studies accounting for 18 9 of reported reptile prey and 3 35 of total prey 7 79 80 93 They can take sizable snakes even adult puff adders which can grow much heavier than the eagle themselves 92 However the bateleur is not immune to venom nor is as well specialized to dispatching venomous snakes as are snake eagles and in one case a mutual killing recorded between a puff adder and a bateleur was reported 7 Sizable and far from defenseless if not venomous reptiles known in the prey spectrum may include monitor lizards including Nile Varanus niloticus and savannah monitors Varanus exanthematicus some terrapins and tortoises and African rock pythons Python sebae although excepting small young ones these types of reptilian prey are perhaps in many cases consumed after they are already deceased such as via roadkills 7 34 79 93 Nevertheless bateleurs occasionally hunt small tortoises and monitor lizards and in one instance live predation on an adult monitor lizard about 1 4 m in length has been reported 97 84 The bateleur is known to carry snakes to the nest in the style of ordinary snake eagles with the dead snake being half swallowed and subsequently extracted by the capturing bird s mate usually the female at the nest 7 Seldom identified prey may include assorted and almost entirely unidentified insects Mostly swarming social insects seem to attract bateleurs including locusts 7 79 It was recently verified that bateleurs will semi regularly visit termite mounds to hunt down alates although such feeding has been inferred in the past 98 Other prey can include a rare amphibian none of which are known to be identified to species or family 79 80 Although fish are not typically taken as much as 1 1 of the diet locally can consist of large Clarias catfish and it is likely that stranded fish are not neglected when opportuned upon 7 6 79 Interspecific predatory relationships edit The bateleur seems to adapt to living in the highly competitive continent of Africa by foraging with a lack of specialization with a seeming lack of discrimination regarding the prey item food source nor its origin although its highly aerial and free ranging foraging mode is quite unique 10 7 The bateleur nonetheless must face considerable and intense competition from other birds of prey especially 7 The range of other raptors especially other eagles and vultures may appear to be daunting 7 6 One of the most similar eagles to regularly encounter the bateleur is the tawny eagle These two species overlap in many significant ways being similar in body mass and predatory prowess as well as in nesting habitat tendency to attack a wide size range of prey including large prey and general disposition Furthermore both of these eagles show ability to freely change feeding methods between live predation scavenging on carrion and piracy 7 9 In Tsavo East National Park bateleurs were studied along with tawny eagles significantly larger martial eagles and slightly smaller African hawk eagles Aquila spilogaster 33 Here all four largish eagles relied primarily upon Kirk s dik dik for food but were mostly slightly staggered in breeding season with the bateleur nesting on average earlier than the other eagles 33 The diet was by far most similar with that tawny eagle in Tsavo East overlapping 66 in prey species and 72 in prey weight Meanwhile the diet overlapped 32 in species and 50 in weight with martial eagles and 37 in species and 57 in weight with African hawk eagles The one discrepancy which is noted in other studies as well is that the bateleur tends to focus on smaller birds than tawny eagles when selecting avian prey 7 33 99 Bateleurs also bear an advantage over tawny eagles in their ability forage in open habitats with the absence of perches due to their aerial foraging methods 33 However data indicates that the tawny eagles is dominant over bateleurs typically at disputed kills or carrion 7 100 One study accrued 26 instances of tawny eagles displacing bateleurs against only 5 where bateleurs displaced tawny eagles giving illustration to the tawny eagles dominance Frequently the bateleur waits until the tawny eagle is done eating before it does so itself if both are at a carcass site 101 nbsp A juvenile bateleur with a tawny eagle a similar eagle in life history Bateleurs may encounter a huge range of other scavengers when coming to carrion Most clearly vultures are often present at carrion However due to their smaller size the tawny eagle and especially the bateleur can begin foraging for carrion earlier in the morning while the vultures must wait for updrafts to undertake flight 102 103 Bateleurs in particular are considered most likely to find a carcass first before other scavengers 103 104 This was verified in a study in Maasai Mara where it was additionally found that scavengers kept to body size in terms of hierarchy The descending order of scavenger dominance was stated to rank starting with the spotted hyenas Crocuta croctua at the top and black backed jackals and feral dogs Canis lupus familiaris then the lappet faced vulture Torgos tracheliotos the Ruppell s vulture Gyps rueppellii followed by all other vultures with the tawny eagle and the bateleur in the second most and the most subordinate scavenger positions 105 Therefore the bateleur is considered a scavenger with high search efficiency but low competitive ability 103 104 105 106 However the bateleur does benefit from the larger scavengers being less able to access a large carcass at best feeding on the eyes of said carcass unless it is already otherwise torn asunder such as large carnivore prey or roadkills 13 104 With the epidemic level reduction of vultures in Africa it was found in Maasai Mara that both bateleurs and tawny eagles have been found to actually increase in sighting frequency in sync with the vanishing numbers of remaining vultures with the number of bateleur sightings increasing by 52 107 To the contrary of the expected hierarchy cases are known where bateleurs have attacked and dominated much larger scavenging birds including white backed vultures Gyps africanus and bearded vulures Gypaetus barbatus with these having been successfully displaced or lost carrion to a bateleur 10 6 Even more impressively cases where bateleurs interacting with much larger more powerful martial eagles have involved instances where the bateleurs have attacked pirated and even brought to ground in clashes that appear to end in a drawl However the martial eagle occupies a notably higher trophic level than the bateleurs and is not considered subservient to bateleurs due its even greater predatory prowess 7 34 79 Similarly instances of considerable competition have been reported between bateleurs and African fish eagles Haliaeetus vocifer which are similarly prone to opportunistic piracy and aggressive interspecific relations However the two species are partitioned by habitat and primary prey 108 It is uncommon to rare but not unprecedented that bateleurs may prey on other raptors 7 109 Bateleurs have been documented preying on black winged kites Elanus caeruleus wintering lesser spotted eagles Clanga pomarina gabar goshawks Micronisus gabar barn owls Tyto alba spotted eagle owls Bubo africanus and peregrine falcons Falco peregrinus 79 84 93 110 Additionally they were considered a likely potential predator upon nestlings of the white backed vulture 111 Certainly the most impressive instance of intraguild predation documented as committed by bateleurs is when one was seen killing an adult Verreaux s eagle owl Bubo lacteus a formidable top predator among owls and possibly the largest avian prey ever reported for a bateleur 7 112 The predators of mature bateleurs themselves are not well documented and in fact Verreaux s eagle owls may the only species verified to repeatedly prey upon bateleurs but this is probably due to rare predator identification at bateleur nests 113 114 Bateleurs are usually considered apex predators 115 By contrast bateleur nestlings are vulnerable to predation compared to other raptors Though adult bateleurs can simply leave the nest or crouch below the nest rim to reduce nest detectability to many predators they can be very aggressive toward conspecifics as well as other raptors and occasionally human intruders However due to their unique foraging mode which takes them far from the nest for long periods of the day the physical defense is largely unable Thus chicks are presumed to be vulnerable to a huge range of predators although very few are properly identified Based on other eagles in Africa these are likely to include various sizes of mammalian carnivores snakes monitors and various birds of prey including even perhaps much smaller species and vultures due to the long periods bateleur eaglets are left unprotected 8 34 101 116 Breeding edit nbsp A probable breeding pair with the female on the left Bateleurs are long lived species slow maturing slow breeding species 61 Bateleurs court each other or re establish existing pair bonds what is considered a spectacular courtship display 10 7 During the courtship display an exaggerated flight is undertaken in which the male dives down at the female who rolls to present him her claws Additionally he sometimes flies with legs dangling loosely during which the wings may be flapped to create a conspicuous whup whup whup noise like a loose sail in the breeze Very infrequently a male bateleur may make a 360 degree lateral roll accompanied by loud whup whup noises at times display may involve 2 males with a single female but during breeding only one male is usually actively courtship A further chasing flight reported is not necessarily nuptial and may be performed by birds of the same size and by an adult or an immature and in some cases is linked to the sociality of the species 5 10 7 34 79 The bateleur is usually rather monogamous and likely with the survivorship of each mate mates for life 7 However rare instances of possible polygyny have been reported 117 The bateleur breeding season tends to fall from September to May in West Africa however juveniles have also been recorded in Mauritania in September 5 41 118 Reportedly the nesting season can be virtually any month in East Africa but chiefly is some time around December August which also is the corresponding peak breeding time in Southern Africa with nesting as late as August to October in the southern stretches of the continent considered unusual 5 7 51 52 54 119 120 In Somalia the breeding season however fell from July to December while in Ethiopia there was no detectable peak whatsoever 46 47 Nests edit nbsp A bateleur on its nest Nests are located in fairly large trees sometimes near a watercourse either in hilly terrain or open flat country At times bateleurs are adaptable and perhaps even favor towards nesting near manmade openings such as roads or paths 5 10 7 Nests are typically at 10 to 15 m 33 to 49 ft above the ground but in extreme may be from 7 to 25 m 23 to 82 ft high 5 7 The nest is normally within the canopy in the fork of the main trunk or a large lateral branch so that it is shaded for much of the day 7 54 A variety of tree species may be used In southern Africa favored trees tend to Adansonia and especially Acacia trees Senegalia nigrescens trees may too be popular 7 54 67 Bateleurs usually nest on structures made by themselves but one nest was reported in on a buffalo weaver nest and was difficult to observe 7 Furthermore old nest of other birds may be used in one case a Wahlberg s eagle Hieraaetus wahlbergi nest taken over and added to deepen it 7 The nest is a solid structure of medium sized sticks measuring about 60 cm 24 in across 30 cm 12 in deep with a leafy cup of about 25 cm 9 8 in across Snake eagles and their kin tend to build relatively small if bulky nests relative to their size and the bateleur is no exception with their nest size being about half that of in diameter of a similarly sized eagle like the tawny eagle 5 7 85 Nests tend to be lined with green leaves by the bateleur pair 5 Both sexes of bateleur are known to contribute to the building or repair of a nest a process that typically takes about 1 2 months though sometimes nest construction can be reportedly protracted even in years where no breeding occurs 7 They often subsequently use a new nest in the same general area in consecutive breeding seasons usually not more than 1 to 3 km 0 62 to 1 86 mi away and may reuse a nest they built previously There is much variation in this regard from 1 nest being used in 5 consecutive years to no nest reusage in 3 recorded years 7 Nests built by bateleurs tend to be favored by lanner falcons Falco biarmicus probably in part because the eagle s young are fledged by July August when lanners tend to lay however 1 nestling was persistently mobbed by a lanner during its last week at the nest 7 In ranching country in Zimbabwe nests are spaced 13 to 16 km 8 1 to 9 9 mi apart 7 In Mozambique nesting spacing was found to be about 5 km 3 1 mi 121 Eggs and development of young edit In this species only one egg is ever laid 5 7 51 52 Their eggs are quite large for the size of the bird being broadly oval and usually an unspotted chalky white but sometimes with a few red stains or indistinct reddish markings which may be cosmetic from feeding and defecating of the parents The bateleur s egg is quite similar in size and coloration to most snake eagles which also generally lay a single egg 5 10 7 122 A bateleur egg may measure from 74 2 to 87 mm 2 92 to 3 43 in in height with an average of 77 4 mm 3 05 in in a sample of 24 and 79 1 mm 3 11 in in a sample of 50 by 57 to 68 1 mm 2 24 to 2 68 in in diameter with an average of 62 3 mm 2 45 in in 24 and 62 7 mm 2 47 in in 50 The eggs are comparable in size to those of martial and crowned eagles Stephanoaetus cornatus eagles of easily up to twice the body size of a bateleur 10 7 34 120 The female bateleur normally incubates alone though rarely males are seen to do so as well 7 79 The female is fed by the male but takes spells off in which she probably feeds on her own kills and the male may take over incubation although reports of instances where he may do the majority of incubation are probably inaccurate 10 7 While the elastic breeding season suggests an indifference to climatic concerns relative to the wet season and dry season the bateleur is usually considered an eagle that lays earlier in the year than overlapping eagles 33 123 124 The incubation stage lasts for 52 to 59 days averaging about 55 days and may the longest of any African raptor Reports of incubation lasting for only 42 43 days are probably erroneous 5 10 7 120 The hatchling is highly altricial and very feeble at first perhaps even more so than most other eagles being unable to lift its own heavy head and possesses a deeply wrinkled cere 10 7 The small eaglet is initially covered in creamy down with a chocolate brown patch behind the eye that matches the rest of the down colour above with creamy flanks 10 At about 2 weeks the young eaglet becomes somewhat more active and the down develops a patchy appearance 7 At 3 weeks the eaglet has a downy white head but the down colour above is dark brown with the first brown feathers sprouting on back of head secondaries and scapulars 10 By 4 weeks they no longer have any white down and brown feathers grow especially the back and wing ones while a week later the feathers continue emerge and the secondaries outgrow the primaries Thence at 7 weeks the feathering of the foreparts occurs rapidly being complete by 35 days but the wing and tail feathers are still growing the last remaining down being on underwing coverts 10 7 The young eaglet resembles those of snake eagles in appearance and feather growth pattern particularly the retarded growth of the primary feathers and in general coloring become greyer as the eaglet ages 10 7 The nestling may first stand at about 5 weeks as well as engage in wing flapping 10 Pre independence juveniles may perch or lie in prone position before they can fly well 7 The stage at which the young first feeds itself is dictated by what prey is brought if it is large the parents will feed the young to 40 days but small fragments will be eaten unaided by the downy young 7 Around 6 weeks is when the eaglet can typically feed itself for the first time 10 At 9 weeks eaglet bateleurs have been recorded doing effective threat displays against humans 10 Fledgling typically occurs around 90 125 days with reported extremes at as little as 93 to as much as 194 days 5 7 The young often returns to the nest after its first flight and continues to do so The young bateleurs become independent quickly within about a week in some case and in others remain closely by and dependent on their parents for about 2 4 months The young bateleurs may follow their parents around in flight until they are fed Coaxing behaviour by parents has been recorded keeping away food until they fly to it perhaps gradually encouraging the young eagle to go farther afield 5 10 7 After leaving the nest area the young bateleurs often wander widely for example one was recorded to have covered 1 347 km2 520 sq mi 7 When soaring near another bateleur nest young bateleurs are often fiercely attacked by adult males 10 There are some reports even frequent reports it is said of immature bateleurs staying to help incubate the eggs although generally this presumably rare 10 125 Parental behaviour edit When the nest is approached at times bateleurs will react forcibly engaging in aggressive barks sometimes diving down from flight at the intruder with loud flapping wings When disturbed in this way however bateleurs very often depart and they will often not return to the nest for up to several hours Generally it seem to be more likely than almost any other African eagle to desert their young 10 7 79 During the incubation and nestling period the male is more demonstrative than the female at the nest sometimes doing the distraction display and regular dive bomb attacks if the nest tree is climbed the female more commonly flies away in the distance Once a lone male baboon climbed a nest tree the female bateleur sat and incubated while the male dive bombed it When this failed to drive it off the male settled on a branch between the baboon and the nest and threatened the monkey with raised wings the baboon was never dislodged but did not harass the eagles at the nest 10 7 Bateleur parents are highly sensitive to breeding from human disturbance oddly they may permit and adapt to regular inspections of the nest but resent an attempts to hide or conceal photographic equipment nearby and regular desert the nest even with a small nestling thus nest photography should be avoided 10 7 79 The ease with which bateleurs are flushed away from their nest appears to lead to uncommonly high nest predation rates while many other eagle including from other parts of the world either sit tightly on their nest until the danger level becomes too high or attack ferociously at the potential threat 7 101 126 The nestling is careful tended to by female as she is at the nest 82 of the time up to the time the eaglet is 10 days in one Kenya study her attendance thence drops to 47 from 10 20 days then after 30 days dropped to about 5 and from 60 days about 1 10 7 When the young is at later stages of maturity the female tends to only engage in very brief prey deliveries 10 7 Both sexes bring prey and feed the young though the male takes a bigger share of this than in many eagles 10 7 After 30 days the eaglet is often left by itself on the nest throughout the night 10 The eaglet is fed nearly every day early on but only every 2 3 days later on especially after leaving the nest 10 Breeding success and failures edit It is estimated that the bateleur produces a mean of 0 47 chicks per nest per year 127 In East Africa the bateleur tends not to breed every year and the replacement rate is about 0 5 per annum 10 In southern Africa the bateleur typically breeds every year whether or not they are successful in raising their eaglet 7 At 4 nests in Zimbabwe a replacement rate of 0 81 young per pair per annum with local figures often being higher where they live more free from human disturbance It was found that Zimbabwe failures were only known to be from infertile or lost eggs 7 34 In Kruger National Park the predation of Verreaux s eagle owls may considerably lower nesting success 7 Furthermore in Kruger it was found that 33 of the population of bateleurs were young birds while the remaining 67 were adults meaning that younger birds are presumably underpopulated 70 Elsewhere even lower numbers around 25 30 of the population is young bateleurs 10 The population or at least in southern Africa seems to be roughly even in terms of sex ratio with an even number of males and females 10 70 In the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park 13 pairs of bateleurs were recorded to produce only 0 33 young per pair There was evidence of a 13 decline in active nesting territories of bateleurs in the Kalahari Gemsbok area during the seven year study and at least a 40 decline over the previous 10 years Vacated nesting territories were not reoccupied by the species There was found to be seemingly no safe buffer zone around the park due perhaps to persecution in the adjacent farmlands when potential mortality of foraging bateleur from the protected park enter these areas as well as nesting site disturbance could have been part of the reason for this decline Poisoned and suspected poisoned bateleurs have been found in the Park during the study period 9 The few that survive their early years may expect a mean estimated lifespan of around 12 14 years and in some cases may manage to live as long as 27 years 10 6 The annual adult survival rate is estimated at 95 while the annual juvenile survival rate is estimated at 75 6 Conservation edit nbsp A bateleur in heraldic pose Bateleurs are a wide ranging species but have shown rather strong declines 1 5 Per estimates from the 1990s extrapolated from an average of 150 km2 58 sq mi per pair it was projected that the total population could have been around 180 000 birds including young ones 5 However it is likely that the species numbers far lower than that 13 Currently the IUCN estimates broadly from 10 000 to 100 000 total individuals 1 The numbers in Southern Africa have shown the most dramatic and drastic known reductions 13 At one time the species numbers at 2000 2500 pairs in the former Transvaal Province alone which was down to around 420 to 470 pairs by the 1990s 5 99 More recently it was estimated that there are less than 700 pairs in the entire region of Southern Africa although that number may be too excessively conservative 13 63 128 In all the bateleur has declined by an estimated 75 in Southern Africa 129 The species is considered threatened in Zimbabwe Namibia Eswatini and South Africa and still considered not uncommon but probably declining in Malawi Zambia Mozambique and Botswana 51 53 52 56 130 131 Declines are not endemic to Southern Africa for bateleurs with declines strongly detected as well in Ivory Coast and Sudan 129 Addition countries that have reported strongly declining numbers are in Togo Niger and Nigeria 40 132 133 Where bateleurs were once common in road surveys in Central West Africa none were detected in newer road surveys from the 2000s in the same areas 134 Claims of an increase in potential numbers of bateleur in Uganda are not verified 48 Decline of the species and the reduction in range is suspected to have been moderately rapid over the past three generations Generally throughout the range the bateleur is considered much more common in protected areas 13 129 However even in several protected areas numbers of bateleurs seem to decreasing 135 136 The declines of the species are almost entirely due to anthropogenic causes 5 13 These include but are not limited to habitat destruction the poisoning of carcasses persecution through shooting and possibly pesticide use 5 137 Poisoning of carcasses is a major issue for scavenging animals especially birds like vultures in Africa 138 139 Zambian bateleurs may suffer from deliberate poisonings as well as those in Eswatini Botswana Zimbabwe and Mozambique The bateleur s wide foraging areas and their ability to locate very small pieces of carrion makes them highly susceptible to poison laced carcasses even from a small proportion of farmers who use poisons Bateleurs and other eagles are not usually the direct target of these poisoning operations which in some cases may be directed to unfavored mammals like jackals or in other cases directed towards vultures by poachers to hide their illegal wildlife killings 13 51 54 63 139 The decline of South African bateleurs is primarily linked with poisonings primarily from large scale farming operations 79 140 141 It is possible that bateleurs may suffer from the effects of DDT though it is found in a small sample of 3 eggs from South Africa that they evidenced low subcritical levels of DDT metabolites probably not enough to effect overall populations 5 129 However it is projected that pesticide use may be harming populations in Zambia as well as in Botswana 53 51 Ongoing persecution is both serious and unsustainable beyond poisoning such killings are known to extent to ongoing shooting and trapping 1 13 129 Some trapping occurs of the species for its feathers which are used in medicine by traditional healers for predicting future events 61 Less well known but probably occurring declines may be due to flying into manmade objects including wire collisions reservoir drownings and road killings 142 Additionally shrinking habitat has been found to be a prevalent threat to bateleurs due largely to expanding human settlements and intensifying livestock agriculture 13 63 A further effect from humans is regular disturbance at bateleur nests although not typically as deliberate as many other threats this is causing the breeding success rates to plummet farther 7 13 129 No large scale actions are underway but they are possibly protected in Yemen as an endangered species 23 It is proposed to implement education and awareness campaigns across its range to reduce the use of poisoned baits Regular population monitoring is being carried out 143 Heraldic and mythological status editThe bateleur plays a prominent role in African heraldic and mythological cultures probably due to its spectacular colours and conspicuous and bold behaviour 10 34 As a result it is likely that the bateleur is the basis for the Zimbabwe Bird which has been prominent since ancient times in Zimbabwean culture and continuously used in heraldic forms including most prominently being featured on the Zimbabwe flag 144 145 A South African myth was that when bateleurs cries in flight the rain will fall 146 The admiration and mythologizing of bateleurs is also known in other areas beyond Zimbabwe including among those in Southern Africa who speak Tswana language as well as elsewhere dating back to the Iron Age with various with the bateleur variously known as kgwadira and petleke and may often in mythology may fulfill the role intelligent servant to their masters which were considered vultures 147 148 In East and Central Africa the bateleur has been referred to variously as gawarakko and nkona and in the Lake Tanganyika was considered an essential possession of sultans whether the birds were dead or alive 149 150 Media edit nbsp A Bateleur blinking showing off the nictitating membrane nbsp Adult nbsp A female sunwarming in a zoo nbsp Immature source source source source A female perched on a gloved hand in Disney s Animal Kingdom nbsp Female in Texas nbsp Two juveniles in Botswana nbsp Skeleton of a bateleur eagle Museum of Osteology nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Terathopius ecaudatus References edit a b c d e f BirdLife International 2020 Terathopius ecaudatus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22695289A174413323 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22695289A174413323 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 a b c d Kemp A C G M Kirwan and D A Christie 2020 Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus version 1 0 In Birds of the World J del Hoyo A Elliott J Sargatal D A Christie and E de Juana Editors Cornell Lab of Ornithology Ithaca NY USA Zimbabwe Bird victoriafalls guide net a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt Ferguson Lees J Christie D 2001 Raptors of the World Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 618 12762 3 a b c d e f g h i j k Hockey P A R Dean W R J and Ryan P G 2016 Roberts VII Birds of Southern Africa John Voelcker Book Fund a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck Steyn P 1983 Birds of prey of southern Africa Their identification and life histories Croom Helm Beckenham UK 1983 a b c Watson R T 1989 Aggressive display and territoriality of the bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus African Zoology 24 2 146 150 a b c Herholdt J J Kemp A C amp Du Plessis D 1996 Aspects of the breeding status and ecology of the Bateleur and Tawny Eagle in the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park South Africa Ostrich 67 3 4 126 137 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Brown L amp Amadon D 1986 Eagles Hawks and Falcons of the World The Wellfleet Press ISBN 978 1555214722 Thiollay J M 2007 Raptor declines in West Africa comparisons between protected buffer and cultivated areas Oryx 41 3 322 329 Garbett R Herremans M Maude G Reading R P amp Amar A 2018 Raptor population trends in northern Botswana A re survey of road transects after 20 years Biological Conservation 224 87 99 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Global Raptor Information Network 2021 Species account Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus Downloaded from http www globalraptors org on 7 Oct 2021 Sibley C G amp Monroe B L 1990 Distribution and taxonomy of birds of the world Yale University Press Wink M amp Sauer Gurth H 2000 Advances in the molecular systematics of African raptors Raptors at risk 135147 Lerner H R amp Mindell D P 2005 Phylogeny of eagles Old World vultures and other Accipitridae based on nuclear and mitochondrial DNA Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 37 2 327 346 Bed Hom B T Darre R amp Fillon V 1998 Chromosome banding studies in the Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus Aves Accipitridae Chromosome research an international journal on the molecular supramolecular and evolutionary aspects of chromosome biology 6 6 437 440 bateleur translation English French dictionary Reverso reverso net Cassin J 1867 Fasti Ornithologiae Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 212 221 a b c d e Clark B amp Davies R 2018 African Raptors Bloomsbury Publishing Newman K 1998 Newman s Birds of Southern Africa Halfway House Southern Book Publishers ISBN 1868127680 Zimmerman D A Pearson D J amp Turner D A 2020 Birds of Kenya and northern Tanzania Bloomsbury Publishing a b c d e BirdLife International 2019 Species factsheet Terathopius ecaudatus Downloaded fromhttp www birdlife org on 29 07 2019 Brown L H amp Cade T J 1972 Age classes and population dynamics of the Bateleur and African Fish Eagle Ostrich 43 1 1 16 a b Kemp A amp Kemp M 2006 Sasol Birds of Prey New Edition Struik a b Dunning John B Jr ed 2008 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 Sinclair I Hockey P Tarboton W Ryan P amp Perrins N 2020 Sasol birds of Southern Africa Penguin Random House South Africa Chittenden R 2014 Birds of Prey of the World St Martin s Publishing Group Hancock P amp Weiersbye I 2015 Birds of Botswana Vol 103 Princeton University Press Clark W S 1999 A Field Guide to the raptors of Europe the Middle East and North Africa Oxford University Press USA J M Mendelsohn A C Kemp H C Biggs R Biggs amp C J Brown 1989 Wing Areas Wing loading and Wing Spans of 66 Species of African Raptors Ostrich Vol 60 No 1 p 35 60 Shaw P Kibuule M Nalwanga D Kaphu G Opige M amp Pomeroy D 2019 Implications of farmland expansion for species abundance richness and mean body mass in African raptor communities Biological conservation 235 164 177 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Smeenk C 1974 Comparative ecological studies of some East African birds of prey Ardea 62 1 2 1 97 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Steyn P 1965 Some observations on the bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus Daudin Ostrich 36 4 203 213 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Micropaedia Knowledge in Depth Vol 15 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1997 Unwin M amp Tipling D 2018 The Empire of the Eagle An Illustrated Natural History Yale University Press Allan D 1996 A Photographic Guide to Birds of Prey of Southern Central and East Africa Cape Town New Holland Publishers ISBN 1853689033 a b Borrow N amp Demey R 2001 Birds of West Africa an Identification Guide Helm Identification Guide Series London Thiollay J M 1985 The birds of Ivory Coast Status and Distribution West African Ornithological Society a b Cheke R A amp Walsh J F 1996 The Birds of Togo an Annotated Check list No 14 British Ornithologists Union a b Isenmann P Benmergui M Browne P Ba A D Diagana C H Diawara Y amp El Abidine ould Sidaty Z 2010 Birds of Mauritania Oiseaux de Mauritanie Societe d Etudes Ornithologiques de France Paris Gore M E J 1990 Birds of the Gambia BOU Check list 3 Jennings M C 1981 The Virds of Saudi Arabia a Check list MC Jennings Martins R P Bradshaw C G Brown A Kirwan G M amp Porter R F 1996 The status of passerines in southern Yemen and the records of the OSME survey in spring 1993 Sandgrouse 17 54 72 Nikolaus G 1987 Distribution atlas of Sudan s Birds with notes on Habitat and Status Zoologisches Forschungsinstitut und Museum Alexander Koenig a b c d Ash C P amp Atkins J D 2009 Birds of Ethiopia and Eritrea an Atlas of Distribution A amp C Black a b Ash J amp Miskell J 2020 Birds of Somalia Bloomsbury Publishing a b Carswell M Pomeroy D E Reynolds J amp Tushabe H 2005 Bird Atlas of Uganda London British Ornithologists Union and British Ornithological Club Stevenson T amp Fanshawe J 2002 Field Guide to the Birds of East Africa Kenya Tanzania Uganda Rwanda and Burundi T amp AD Poyser a b Dean W R J 2000 The Birds of Angola an Annotated Checklist BOU Checklist No 18 a b c d e f g Dowsett R J Aspinwall D R amp Dowsett Lemaire F 2008 The Birds of Zambia an Atlas and Handbook Tauraco Press a b c d e Dowsett Lemaire F amp Dowsett R J 2006 The Birds of Malawi An Atlas and Handbook Tauraco Press a b c d Penry H 1994 Bird Atlas of Botswana University of Kwazulu Natal Press a b c d e f Irwin M P S 1981 The Birds of Zimbabwe Quest Pub Watson R T 1983 Range reduction of the Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus and the development of agriculture in South Africa In Proceedings of the Bird and Man symposium Witwatersrand Bird Club Johannesburg a b Monadjem A amp Rasmussen M W 2008 Nest distribution and conservation status of eagles selected hawks and owls in Swaziland Gabar 19 1 22 Willis E O amp Oniki Y 1993 An observation of Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus in northern Tunisia Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 113 62 64 Balmer D amp Betton K 2007 Around the region Sandgrouse 29 122 128 van den Berg A B 2007 WP reports Dutch Birding 29 168 183 Terathopius ecaudatus Aguila Volatinera Bateleur BirdCadiz com Turkiye de Ilk Defa 2015 Yilinda Goruntulenen Cambaz Kartal Yillar Sonra Bu Defa Sinop ta Goruntulendi a b c d Simmons R E and C J Brown Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus The Atlas of Southern African Birds 1 1997 202 203 Lewis A amp Pomeroy D 2017 A bird atlas of Kenya Routledge a b c d Parker V 2005 The Atlas of the Birds of central Mozambique Endangered Wildlife Trust and the Avian Demography Unit Kemp A C amp Begg K S 2001 Comparison of time activity budgets and population structure for 18 large bird species in the Kruger National Park South Africa Ostrich 72 3 4 179 184 Mallon J M Bildstein K L amp Katzner T E 2016 In flight turbulence benefits soaring birds The Auk Ornithological Advances 133 1 79 85 Watson R T 2011 19 Bateleur In The Eagle Watchers pp 159 166 Cornell University Press a b Chittenden Hugh 2016 Roberts bird guide illustrating nearly 1 000 species in Southern Africa Davies Greg Ornithologist Weiersbye Ingrid John Voelcker Bird Book Fund Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology Cape Town South Africa Second ed Cape Town ISBN 9781920602017 OCLC 958354485 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moreau R E On the Bateleur especially at the Nest Ibis87 no 2 1945 224 249 Cade T J amp Greenwald L 1964 Nasal Salt Secretion in Falconiform Birds The Condor Vol 68 No 4 p 338 350 a b c Watson R T 1990 Population dynamics of the Bateleur in the Kruger National Park Ostrich 61 1 2 5 12 Urban E K 1984 Birds of Prey of Southern Africa 639 641 Bildstein K L 2006 Migrating Raptors of the World their Ecology amp Conservation Cornell University Press Oatley T B Oschadleus H D Navarro R A amp Underhill L G 1998 Review of ring recoveries of birds of prey in southern Africa 1948 1998 Endangered Wildlife Trust Johannesburg Bataleur Eagle Terathopius ecaudatus Africa www krugerpark co za Retrieved 2019 07 29 Reid D 2014 Bateleur sunbathing at Punda Maria Biodiversity Observations 33 36 Grier J W 1975 Avian Spread winged Sunbathing in Thermoregulation and Drying Grier Cade T J 1973 Sun bathing as a thermoregulatory aid in birds The Condor 75 1 106 108 Africa HPH Publishing South 5 October 2017 Praying Bateleur Do you know why Bateleur Eagles do this HPH Publishing South Africa Retrieved 2019 07 29 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an Watson R T 1986 Biology ecology and population dynamics of the Bateleur Ph D dissertation University of the Witwatersrand South Africa a b c d e f g h Watson R T 2000 Flight foraging and food of the Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus an aerodynamically specialized opportunistic forager Raptors at Risk 65 75 Sustaita D 2008 Musculoskeletal underpinnings to differences in killing behavior between North American accipiters Falconiformes Accipitridae and falcons Falconidae Journal of Morphology 269 3 283 301 Kozlowski J 1989 Sexual size dimorphism a life history perspective Oikos 54 2 253 255 Vernon C J 1980 Prey remains from nests of Bateleur Eagles Honeyguide 103 104 22 25 a b c d e f g h Steyn P 1980 Breeding and Food of the Bateleur in Zimbabwe Rhodesia Ostrich 51 168 178 a b Heyman P Brown L Urban E K amp Newman K B 2020 The Birds of Africa Volume I Bloomsbury Publishing Fanson B G Fanson K V amp Brown J S 2010 Ecological factors affecting the foraging behaviour of Xerus rutilus African Zoology 45 2 265 272 a b Kingdon J Happold D Butynski T Hoffmann M Happold M amp Kalina J 2013 Mammals of Africa A amp C Black Ogen Odoi A A amp Dilworth T G 1984 Effects of grassland burning on the savanna hare predator relationships in Uganda African Journal of Ecology 22 2 101 106 Clutton Brock T H Gaynor D McIlrath G M Maccoll A D C Kansky R Chadwick P amp Brotherton P N M 1999 Predation group size and mortality in a cooperative mongoose Suricata suricatta Journal of Animal Ecology 68 4 672 683 Poirier Poulin S amp Teichroeb J A 2020 The vocal repertoire of an African colobine Colobus angolensis ruwenzorii a multi level society compared to congeners in stable groups Behaviour 157 7 597 628 Walek M L 1978 Vocalizations of the black and white colobus monkey Colobus polykomos Zimmerman 1780 American Journal of Physical Anthropology 49 2 227 239 a b Moreau R E 1945 On the Bateleur especially at the nest Ibis 87 224 249 a b c d Fact sheets Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance Library Steyn P 1971 Notes on the breeding biology of the Freckled Nightjar Ostrich 42 S1 179 188 Ward D 1989 Behaviour associated with breeding of crowned blackwinged and lesser blackwinged plovers Ostrich 60 4 141 150 Kemp A C 1976 Breeding biology of the same species of hornbills Transvaal Museum Memoirs 20 1 19 29 Nicolai B 2013 Gaukler Terathopius ecaudatus frisst Schildkrote Ornithol Jber Mus Heineanum 31 91 92 Hagemeyer N D amp Bond M L 2014 First observations of termite insectivory in the bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 126 3 611 613 a b Tarboton W R amp Allan D G 1984 The status and conservation of birds of prey in the Transvaal Transvaal Museum Monograph No 3 Pretoria Watson R T amp Watson C 1987 Interspecific piracy between Tawny Eagles and Bateleurs how common is it Gabar 2 9 11 a b c Watson R T 1988 The influence of nestling predation on nest site selection and behaviour of the bateleur African Zoology 23 3 143 149 Mundy P J 1982 The comparative biology of southern African vultures Johannesburg Vulture Study Group a b c Ogada D L Monadjem A McNally L Kane A Jackson A L 2014 Vultures acquire information on carcass location from scavenging eagles Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 281 1793 20141072 doi 10 1098 rspb 2014 1072 PMC 4173674 PMID 25209935 a b c Houston D C 1980 Interrelations of African scavenging animals In Proc IV Pan Afr orn congr pp 307 312 a b Kendall C J 2013 Alternative strategies in avian scavengers how subordinate species foil the despotic distribution Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 67 3 383 393 Dean W R J amp MacDonald I A W 1981 A review of African birds feeding in association with mammals Ostrich 52 3 135 155 Virani M Z Kendall C Njoroge P amp Thomsett S 2011 Major declines in the abundance of vultures and other scavenging raptors in and around the Masai Mara ecosystem Kenya Biological Conservation 144 2 746 752 Kruger O 1997 Population density and intra and interspecific competition of the African Fish Eagle Haliaeeetus vocifer in Kyambura Game Reserve southwest Uganda Ibis 139 1 19 24 de Visser S N Freymann B P amp Olff H 2011 The Serengeti food web empirical quantification and analysis of topological changes under increasing human impact Journal of animal ecology 80 2 484 494 Hustler K 1983 Breeding biology of the Peregrine Falcon in Zimbabwe Ostrich 54 3 161 171 Maphalala M I amp Monadjem A 2017 White backed Vulture Gyps africanus parental care and chick growth rates assessed by camera traps and morphometric measurements Ostrich 88 2 123 129 Bateleur kills a Giant Eagle Owl in Kruger National Park YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 19 Retrieved 2021 10 17 Brown L H 1965 Observations on Verreaux s Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus Temminck in Kenya Journal of East African Natural History 1965 111 101 107 Cooper J E 1973 Post mortem findings in East African birds of prey Journal of wildlife diseases 9 4 368 375 Jenkins A R De Goede K H Sebele L amp Diamond M 2013 Brokering a settlement between eagles and industry sustainable management of large raptors nesting on power infrastructure Bird Conservation International 23 2 232 246 Murn C 2014 Observations of predatory behavior by white headed vultures Journal of Raptor Research Ford N L 1983 Variation in mate fidelity in monogamous birds Current ornithology 329 356 Grimes L G 1987 The Birds of Ghana an Annotated Check list No 9 British Ornithologists Union Britton P L 1980 Birds of East Africa their habitat status and distribution EANHS Nairobi a b c Brown L H 1969 Some factors affecting breeding in eagles Ostrich 40 S1 157 167 Tarboton W 2001 A Guide to the Nests and Eggs of Southern African Birds Struik Cape Town Mori D Vyas R amp Upadhyay K 2017 Breeding biology of the Short toed Snake Eagle Circaetus gallicus Indian Birds 12 6 149 156 Virani M amp Watson R T 1998 Raptors in the East African tropics and western Indian Ocean islands state of ecological knowledge and conservation status Journal of Raptor Research 32 28 39 Moreau R E 1950 The breeding seasons of African birds 1 Land birds Ibis 92 2 223 267 Grimes L G 1976 The occurrence of cooperative breeding behaviour in African birds Ostrich 47 1 1 15 Morrison J L Terry M amp Kennedy P L 2006 Potential factors influencing nest defense in diurnal North American raptors Journal of Raptor Research 40 2 98 110 Watson R T 1990 Breeding Biology of the Bateleur Ostrich 61 1 2 p13 23 DOI 10 1080 00306525 1990 9633933 Barnes K N ed 2000 The Eskom Red Data Book of birds of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland Johannesburg BirdLife South Africa a b c d e f Watson R A amp Maritz A W A 2000 Terathopius ecaudatus Bateleur Pp 74 76 in G H Verdoorn K L Bildstein and S Ellis eds Selected African Falconiformes conservation assessment and management plan IUCN SSC Conservation Breeding Specialist Group Apple Valley MN Simmons R E amp Brown C J 2006 Birds to Watch in Namibia Red rare and endemic species National Biodiversity Programme Windhoek Namibia Hartley R 1998 Raptor migration and conservation in Zimbabwe Torgos 28 135 150 Jensen F P Christensen K D amp Petersen B S 2008 The avifauna of southeast Niger Malimbus 30 30 54 Gustafsson R Hjort C Ottosson U amp Hall P 2003 Birds at Lake Chad and in the Sahel of NE Nigeria Rondeau G amp Thiollay J M 2004 West African vulture decline Vulture news 51 13 33 Herholdt J J amp De Villiers D J 1991 Breeding success and population density of the Bateleur Terathopius ecaudatus in the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park Gabar 6 3 6 Thiollay Jean Marc 2006 04 13 The decline of raptors in West Africa long term assessment and the role of protected areas Ibis 148 2 240 254 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 2006 00531 x ISSN 0019 1019 Ogada D L 2014 The power of poison pesticide poisoning of Africa s wildlife Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1322 1 1 20 Margalida A Ogada D amp Botha A 2019 Protect African vultures from poison Science 365 6458 1089 1090 a b Ogada D L Keesing F amp Virani M Z 2012 Dropping dead causes and consequences of vulture population declines worldwide Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1249 1 57 71 Brown C J 1988 Scavenging raptors on farmlands what is their future African Wildlife 42 103 105 Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology University of Cape Town S A 1989 Strychnine poison and the conservation of avian scavengers in the Karoo South Africa South African Journal of Wildlife Research 24 month delayed open access 19 3 102 106 Anderson M D 2000 Raptor conservation in the Northern Cape Province South Africa Ostrich 71 1 2 25 32 The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2019 07 29 Hubbard P 2009 The Zimbabwe birds Interpretation and symbolism Honeyguide Journal of Birdlife Zimbabwe 55 2 109 116 Msimanga A 2000 The role of birds in the culture of the Ndebele people of Zimbabwe Ostrich 71 1 2 22 24 Brunton S Badenhorst S amp Schoeman M H 2013 Ritual fauna from Ratho Kroonkop a second millennium AD rain control site in the Shashe Limpopo Confluence area of South Africa Azania Archaeological Research in Africa 48 1 111 132 Wilmsen E N 2014 Myths gender birds beads A reading of Iron Age hill sites in interior Southern Africa Africa 84 3 398 423 Matjila D S 2015 Birds as subjects in Setswana folklore Depiction of their relationship to man South African Journal of African Languages 35 1 105 111 Sava G amp Tosco M 2015 The Ongota language and two ways of looking at the marginal and hunting gathering peoples of East Africa Grant C H B 1925 Uha in Tanganyika territory The Geographical Journal 66 5 411 422 External links editBateleur Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Terathopius ecaudatus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Terathopius ecaudatus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bateleur amp oldid 1223510458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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