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Verreaux's eagle

Verreaux's eagle (Aquila verreauxii) is a large, mostly African, bird of prey. It is also called the black eagle, especially in southern Africa, not to be confused with the black eagle (Ictinaetus malayensis) of south and southeast Asia.[2] The Verreaux's eagle lives in hilly and mountainous regions of southern and eastern Africa (extending marginally into Chad, Mali and Niger), and very locally in the Middle East.

Verreaux's eagle
At the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in Roodepoort, South Africa
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Genus: Aquila
Species:
A. verreauxii
Binomial name
Aquila verreauxii
  range of Verreaux's eagle

Verreaux's eagle is one of the most specialized species of accipitrid in the world, with its distribution and life history revolving around its favorite prey species, the rock hyraxes. When hyrax populations decline, the species have been shown to survive with mixed success on other prey, such as small antelopes, gamebirds, hares, monkeys and other assorted vertebrates. Despite a high degree of specialization, Verreaux's eagle has, from a conservation standpoint, been faring relatively well in historic times. One population of this species, in the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe, is arguably the best studied eagle population in the world, having been subject to continuous detailed study since the late 1950s.[2][3] Like all eagles, this species belongs to the taxonomic order Accipitriformes (formerly included in Falconiformes) and the family Accipitridae, which may be referred to colloquially as accipitrids or raptors.

Taxonomy edit

 
Illustration from the species description by Lesson published in 1830[4]

This species was first described by René Primevère Lesson in his 1830 publication, Centurie zoologique, ou choix d'animaux rares, nouveaux ou imparfaitement connus, as Aquila Verreauxii.[5] The species’ name commemorates the French naturalist Jules Verreaux, who visited southern Africa in the early 19th century and collected the type specimen for the French Academy of Sciences.[6][7]

Verreaux's eagle is part of a broad group of raptors called "booted eagles" which are defined by the feature that all included species have feathering over their tarsus, whereas most other accipitrids have bare legs. Included in this group are all species described as "hawk eagles" including the genera Spizaetus and Nisaetus, as well as assorted monotypical genera such as Oroaetus, Lophaetus, Stephanoaetus, Polemaetus, Lophotriorchis and Ictinaetus. The genus Aquila is distributed across every continent but for South America and Antarctica. Up to 20 species have been classified in the genus but the taxonomic placement of some of the traditionally included species has recently been questioned. Traditionally, the Aquila eagles have been grouped superficially as largish, mainly brownish or dark-colored booted eagles that vary little in transition from their juvenile to their adult plumages.

Genetic research has recently shown the Verreaux's eagle is included in a clade with its nearest relatives, the sister species Bonelli's eagle (A. fasciatus) and African hawk-eagle (A. spilogaster), as well as the golden eagle. More distantly related are the sister species pair, the wedge-tailed eagle (A. audax) and Gurney's eagle (A. gurneyi).[8] Closely related to this clade are the Cassin's hawk-eagle (A. africanus).[8] Some of the relationships within this group have long been suspected based on morphological similarities among the large-bodied species.[9] The identification of the smaller, much paler-bellied A. fasciatus and A. spilogaster as members of the clade was a surprise, given that they were previously included in the genus Hieraaetus.[3][10][11] Cassin's hawk-eagle has been assigned to both the Hieraaetus group and the Spizaetus/Nisaetus "hawk-eagle" group but is now known based on this genetic data to also nest within Aquila.[8]

Other largish Aquila species, the eastern imperial eagle (A. heliaca), the Spanish imperial eagle (A. adaberti), the tawny eagle (A. rapax) and the steppe eagles (A. nipalensis), are now thought to be a separate, close-knit clade, which attained some characteristics similar to those of the prior clade via convergent evolution.[10][11] Genetically, the "spotted eagles" (C. pomarina, C. hastata & C. clanga), have been discovered to be more closely related to the long-crested eagle (Lophaetus occipitalis) and the black eagle,[10][12] and have been transferred to the genus Clanga.[8] The genus Hieraaetus, traditionally including the booted eagle (H. pennatus), little eagle (H. morphnoides) and Ayres's hawk-eagle (H. ayresii), consists of much smaller species, that are in fact the smallest birds called eagles outside of the unrelated Spilornis serpent-eagle genus. This genus has recently been eliminated by many authorities and is now occasionally also included in Aquila, although not all ornithological unions have followed this suit in this re-classification.[3][11][13] The small-bodied Wahlberg's eagle (H. wahlbergi) has been traditionally considered an Aquila species due to its lack of change from juvenile to adult plumage and brownish color but it is actually genetically aligned to the Hieraaetus lineage.[10][14]

Description edit

 
Portrait of Aquila verreauxii
 
Adult Verreaux's eagle in flight in South Africa.

Verreaux's eagle is a very large eagle. It measures 75 to 96 cm (30 to 38 in) long from the bill to the tip of the tail, making it the sixth longest eagle in the world.[15] Males can weigh 3 to 4.2 kg (6.6 to 9.3 lb) and the larger females weigh 3.1 to 7 kg (6.8 to 15.4 lb). The average weight is approximately 4.19 kg (9.2 lb), based on the weights of 21 eagles of both sexes. Other reported mean body mass measurements of Verreaux's eagles were lower however, with seven unsexed birds averaging 3.32 kg (7.3 lb), while four unsexed eagles in an additional study averaged 3.72 kg (8.2 lb). In yet another study, seven males were found to average 3.76 kg (8.3 lb) and seven females to average 4.31 kg (9.5 lb). In another group of weighed eagles, four females were found to average 4.6 kg (10 lb). It is the seventh or eighth heaviest living eagle in the world. In average mass and overall weight range, if not linear measurements, the Verreaux's is very similar in size to its occasional competitor, the martial eagle, which is regularly titled the largest of the African eagles. It also rivals the martial and golden eagles as the largest extant member of the "booted eagle" clan.[15][16][17][18][19][20][21] It has a wingspan of 1.81 to 2.3 m (5 ft 11 in to 7 ft 7 in).[15][22] The wing chord of the male is 56.5 to 59.5 cm (22.2 to 23.4 in) and that of the female is 59 to 64 cm (23 to 25 in). Among other standard measurements in the Verreaux's eagles, both sexes measure 27.2 to 36 cm (10.7 to 14.2 in) in tail length and 9.5 to 11 cm (3.7 to 4.3 in) in tarsus.[9][15] Other than the female's slight size advantage, adult males and females are physically indistinguishable from each other.[15] Adult Verreaux's eagles are mostly jet-black in color.[9] The yellow coloration of the cere (the bill is gun-metal grey), eye-ring and “eye-brows”, all stand out in contrast to the black plumage.[15] Even more prominent on flying birds when seen from above is the white on the back, rump and upper-tail coverts and part of the scapulars, which forms a V-shaped patch, although this feature is partially obscured in perched birds.[9] Adults also have conspicuous white windows on the wing quills at the carpal joint (at the base of the primaries) when seen flying both from above and below.[9][15] The bill is stout, the head is prominent on the relatively long neck and the legs are fully feathered.[15]

 
Juvenile Verreaux's eagle.

Juvenile and immature plumages differ markedly from the plumage of adults. They are overall a dark brown color.[23] Immatures have a strongly contrasting golden crown and a rufous or ginger nape and mantle. They have small white streaks on the forehead and black on their cheeks. The throat is dark streaked, the lower throat is pale brown and the upper-chest is brown.[15] The rest of the underside is brown but for a blackish-blotched rufous to cream-colored abdomen and lightly marked creamy thighs and legs. The feathers of the upper-tail and upper-wing coverts are brown with white streaks in young birds, while the other tail and wing quills are nearly black. The wing quills when seen from below in flight show considerable whitish mottling, with more extensive white than is typically seen in adult plumages. The immature has a dark brown iris and yellowish feet.[9] Black feathers increase from 2 to 5 years of age amongst a scattering of brown-tipped feathers, though the contrasting creamy trousers are maintained through the 3rd year. By the 4th year, they look dark grey-brown with a buff-patch on the nape and mottling of retained brownish feathers. At the end of the subadult phase at around 5 years of age, the plumage is practically indistinguishable from the adult.[24] Full adult plumage is probably attained in 5 to 6 years.[25]

 
Subadult Verreaux's eagle flying

The Verreaux's eagle is essentially unmistakable, especially in adulthood. No other black-colored raptor in its range approaches this species’ large size, nor possesses its distinctive patterns of white.[15] The golden eagle is of similar size or marginally larger size and the two species are the heaviest living Aquila species and measure only marginally less than the slightly lighter-weight Australasian wedge-tailed eagle in total wing and bill-to-tail length.[3] While the juvenile Verreaux's eagle is quite different from the adult's, its plumage is no less distinctive. No other accipitrid shares the mottled brownish body, blackish wings with large white patches or contrasting whitish, rufous and golden color around the head and neck. The flight profile of Verreaux's eagle is also distinctive: it is the only Aquila species other than the golden eagle to soar in a pronounced dihedral, with the wings held slightly above the back and primaries upturned at the tip to make a V shape. In the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia and possibly in some parts of the Arabian Peninsula and the southwestern edge of the Middle East, the ranges of the golden and Verreaux's eagles overlap, but the golden is a mostly brown bird and shares none of the Verreaux's black plumage. The immature golden eagle has white patches on its underwing as do Verreaux's, but they are less extensive than those of the latter species. The wing shape also differs from the golden's, as the Verreaux's eagle has very broad outer secondaries and a relatively narrow pinch at the base of the primaries, whereas the tapering of a golden eagle's wing is more gradual. The Verreaux's eagle wings have variously been described as paddle, spoon or leaf shaped.[9][15] Imperial eagles too have white markings on their wing coverts, but are different in flight profile (flatter winged) and overall coloration (dark brown).[15]

Voice edit

 
A captive Verreaux's eagle in South Africa.

This species is largely silent, though is arguably a stronger vocalist than its close cousin, the golden eagle.[15] Chicking and chirruping sounds like that of a young turkey or francolin, pyuck, have been heard in various contexts, such as pairs being reunited. More striking sounds are loud, ringing whaeee-whaeee, heeeee-oh or keeooo-keeooo calls used as contact calls or during intruder chases. Various screams, barks, yelps and mews have been heard to be issued at potential mammalian predators.[9][15] The young emits feeble chirps at first, later more likely to cluck like the adults.[9]

Habitat and distribution edit

Verreaux's eagle has specific habitat requirements and is rare outside of its particular habitat type. It lives in kopjes, which are dry, rocky environments in anything from rocky hills to high mountains amongst cliffs, gorges and inselbergs often surrounded by savanna, thornbush and sub-desert.[15] It is often found in dry areas with less than 60 cm (24 in) of average annual rainfall.

It is highest ranging in elevation in Ethiopia and East Africa, where found up to 4,000 m (13,000 ft) above sea level.[9] Verreaux's eagle is found from the Marra Mountains[26] of Sudan southward through that country[27] to 16°N in Eritrea,[28] along the northern mountains of Somalia,[29] in much of Ethiopia (mostly the central, mountainous spine),[30] possibly some mountains in northeastern Uganda,[31] Kenya, easternmost Democratic Republic of the Congo and possibly Tanzania.[15]

Southeastern Africa is the heart of the Verreaux's eagle range: they are found in most mountain ranges in Malawi but for the Nyika Plateau, the Mafinga Hills and the Lulwe Hills,[32] in Zambia (especially the escarpments bordering Lake Kariba to the gorges below Victoria Falls), in Zimbabwe (especially east of the central plateau),[33] Mozambique, Eswatini,[34] Lesotho and down into South Africa, where they largely inhabit the Karoo, along the cliffs of the Great Escarpment, the Cape Fold Mountains and Cape Peninsula.[35][36][37] A somewhat more sparse distribution is known in Botswana, western Namibia and southwestern Angola (in the Serra da Chela).[38][39] Elsewhere in Africa, the Verreaux's eagle may be found but tends to be rare and only spottily seen, such as in eastern Mali, northeastern Chad,[40] the Aïr Mountains of Niger[41] and southwestern Cameroon (where known only as a vagrant).[42] In 1968, only a single record of Verreaux's eagle (from Jordan) was known from outside of Africa, but now it is known to be a rare breeder in the Middle East: from a handful of immature records and territorial adult behavior, breeding has been inferred in Lebanon,[43][44] Israel,[45] Oman,[46] Saudi Arabia[47] and Yemen.[48][49]

Dietary ecology edit

 
Few accipitrids are as specialized as the Verreaux's eagle. One of their two favored prey species: Cape hyrax.

Two species comprise considerably more than half of (often more than 90% of) the Verreaux's eagle's diet: the Cape hyrax (Procavia capensis) and the yellow-spotted rock hyrax (Heterohyrax brucei). Few other accipitrids are as singularly specialized to hunt a single prey family as Verreaux's eagles, perhaps excluding the snail kite (Rostrhamus sociabilis) and the slender-billed kite (Helicolestes hamatus) with their specialization on Pomacea snails. Not even accipitrids named after their staple food are known to be as specialized, i.e. the bat hawk (Macheiramphus alcinus), palm-nut vulture (Gypohierax angolensis), lizard buzzard (Kaupifalco monogrammicus) and perhaps the rufous crab hawk (Buteogallus aequinoctialis). Certainly, the Verreaux's eagle has the most conservative diet of Aquila species, though the diet is more diverse in South Africa than in Zimbabwe.[50]

In the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe, the two hyraxes comprised 1,448 out of 1,550 eagle prey items recorded at eyries just after the breeding season from 1995 to 2003.[51] In the same area, from 1957 to 1990, 98.1% of the diet was made up of rock hyrax.[2] In a sample size of 224 from 102 nests in Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, 99.1% of the remains were of hyrax.[52] Elsewhere in Tanzania, the diet is more mixed, with 53.7% of the remains from 24 nests made up of hyrax.[53] In a nest in South Africa, 89.1% of the remains from a sampling of 55 were of hyrax.[54] No detailed statistics are known but the hyrax are likely to the main prey in every population and have been mentioned to dominate the diet in Mozambique,[55] Malawi[32] and Botswana[56] Around 400 hyrax may be taken through the year by a pair with young.[15] The entire distribution of the species neatly corresponds with that of the two species of rock hyrax.[9] To date, there are no known instances of Verreaux's eagle hunting the two species of tree hyraxes.[50]

In the first 10 years of constant observation of the population from the Matobo Hills, only two kills were witnessed. However, enough hunting behavior has been ultimately observed to give a good idea how a Verreaux's eagle obtains its prey.[24] This species most often forages in low-level quartering flight, with the rock hyraxes chiefly caught after a rapid, somewhat twisting dive in the few seconds after the eagle surprises the hyrax. Like the golden eagle, Verreaux's eagle uses natural contours of the ground in rocky and mountainous habitats to increase the element of surprise, as hyraxes (appropriately considering their diverse range of predators) tend to be highly wary.[15][50] Verreaux's eagle have been known to hunt from a perch, though rarely.[9][57] Hunting hyrax cooperatively has been recorded, with one eagle of a pair flying past and distracting the prey while the other strikes from behind. Verreaux's eagle may knock hyraxes off cliffs and take arboreal prey from treetops, but it usually kills on the ground.[15] The daily estimate food requirements of this species are around 350 g (12 oz), nearly a third more than that of a golden eagle despite the latter's marginally heavier body weight.[24] Rock hyraxes are often difficult to observe for humans, other than a glimpse, but a Verreaux's eagle can fly out and then return to the nest with a kill in the matter of a few minutes.[24]

Of the two species regularly taken, the yellow-spotted rock hyrax can weigh from 1 to 3.63 kg (2.2 to 8.0 lb) with an average of 2.4 kg (5.3 lb), although specimens from Zimbabwe are noticeably heavier and larger than specimens from Serengeti National Park. Cape hyrax, weighing from 1.8 to 5.5 kg (4.0 to 12.1 lb) with average of around 3.14 kg (6.9 lb), can be even larger than the Verreaux's eagles themselves, so can be more difficult to kill. Yellow-spotted rock hyraxes are more often taken in the Matobo Hills, perhaps because of their smaller size or its more diurnal habits. Adult rock hyraxes are disproportionately selected, perhaps due to being out in the open more regularly. In Cape hyraxes, 1- to 2-year-old males are particularly vulnerable, since they are forced to disperse at sexual maturity. Juvenile hyraxes constituted from 11–33% of prey remains in the Western Cape while 18% of hyraxes killed were juveniles in Matobo Hills. Because of their greater weight, Cape hyraxes are frequently either consumed at the kill site (putting the eagle at risk of losing prey to competing predators or to attack by large mammalian carnivores) or are decapitated and brought to the nest or perch. Fewer skulls or jaws of Cape hyraxes than of yellow-spotted rock hyraxes have been found at nest sites.[58][59] However, the Cape hyrax has a wider distribution than the yellow-spotted and the Verreaux's eagle may hunt the Cape hyrax almost exclusively outside of the long band of eastern Africa where the smaller species is distributed.[50] In comparison to the golden eagle, Verreaux's eagle has a foot pad that about 20% wider, which may be an adaptation to taking the bulky and broad-backed rock hyrax.[60] The foot of the Verreaux's eagle is reportedly larger than a human hand.[61] The enlarged rear hallux claw of a Verreaux's at an average of 52.3 mm (2.06 in) in 4 females and 49.1 mm (1.93 in) in 5 males is quite similar in size to that of a golden eagle.[21] In South Africa, where the Cape hyrax is the main prey species, the estimated mean size of prey taken to the nest is around 2.6 kg (5.7 lb), perhaps twice as heavy as prey taken by some nesting golden eagles.[60] However, the mean size of prey taken by Verreaux's eagle in the Matobo Hills, with more yellow-spotted rock hyrax, was around 1.82 kg (4.0 lb), around the same estimated weight as prey taken by golden eagles in Europe and smaller than the average estimated mass of prey taken to golden eagle nests in regions like Scotland or Mongolia.[3][62]

Other prey edit

 
An adult Verreaux's eagle carrying avian prey.

Verreaux's eagle are capable of taking diverse prey, but this is infrequent in areas with healthy rock hyrax populations. Cases where more diverse food is brought to the nest are usually either considered to be areas where rock hyrax populations have declined or areas where eagles occupy home ranges which included non-rocky habitat such as savanna, which are described by Valerie Gargett as “poor food areas” due to their lack of hyrax.[2][63] In such areas, about 80% of prey is mammalian.[9] Verreaux's eagles that are less specialized have diets and hunting capacities that are similar to those of the golden eagle, although the latter species often subsists on hares, rabbits, ground squirrels or grouse for about half or two-thirds of its diet, a portion still comprised by rock hyrax in the Verreaux's.[2][3] One study accumulated records of Verreaux's eagle preying on at least 100 prey species.[64] Other prey types recorded have included small (mainly juvenile) antelopes, hares, rabbits, meerkats (Suricata suricatta), other mongooses, monkeys, squirrels, cane rats, bushbabies and lambs (Ovis aries) and kids (Capra aegagrus hircus). Francolin (Francolinus ssp.) and guineafowl (Numina ssp.) as well as waterfowl, herons, egrets, bustards, pigeons, crows (Corvus ssp.), doves, chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) and a great sparrowhawk (Accipiter melanoleucus) have been among the recorded avian prey.[15][65] Avian prey ranging in size from 102.6 g (3.62 oz) alpine swift (Tachymarptis melba) to 7.26 kg (16.0 lb) adult male Denham's bustards (Neotis denhami).[16][66][67] In Tanzania, out of a sample size of 41 from 26 nests, 53.7% of remains were of hyraxes, 29.3% of francolins, guineafowl and chickens, 12.2% of antelopes, 2.4% of hares and rabbits and 2.4% of mongoose.[53] Tortoises made up 145 of 5748 from 73 sites (2.5%) in South Africa. Rarely, snakes and lizards may also be taken and even termites have been eaten by this species.[15][24]

In South Africa, the commonest foods were (in descending order of preference): Cape hyrax, Smith's red rock hare (Pronolagus rupertris), meerkat, mountain reedbuck (Redunca fulvorufula), goats and sheep, scrub hare (Lepus saxatilis), Cape francolin (Francolinus capensis), helmeted guineafowl (Numida meleagris), yellow mongoose (Cynictis penicillata) and Angulate tortoise (Chersina angulata).[15] In “poor food areas” of the Matobo Hills, three nests included 53.6% hyrax, 10.7% cane-rats, 7.1% monkeys, 7.1% mongoose and 3.6% antelope.[2] From 1997 to 2005 in the same area, non-hyrax prey (each representing less than 10 out of 1550 prey items at nests) included white-tailed mongoose (Ichneumia albicauda), steenbok (Raphicerus campestris), domestic goat, vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus), Jameson's red rock hare (Pronolagus randensis), helmeted guineafowl, Swainson's francolin (Pternistis swainsonii), Natal francolin (Pternistis natalensis), southern red-billed hornbill (Tockus rufirostris), rock pigeon (Columba livia), white-necked raven (Corvus albicollis), leopard tortoise (Stigmochelys pardalis) and giant plated lizard (Gerrhosaurus validus).[51] In the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden of South Africa, the primary prey found around nests after a perceptible hyrax decline has become helmeted guineafowl and francolins, followed by cane rats, rabbits and dikdiks (Rhynchotragus ssp.).[63] Young baboons may also be hunted, even the large-bodied chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) which have issued a predator alarm call in response to the presence of Verreaux's eagles.[68] Carrion either fairly frequent or none at all.[2][57] A study of the taking of domestic lambs in the Karoo found only two cases of lambs being eaten by Verreaux's eagle and these were already dead when carried off. This contrasts with the golden eagle, which in some areas may eat many dead lambs and occasionally hunt lives ones.[3][69] An impressive range of mammalIan carnivores is known to be taken by Verreaux's eagles. Some of these may consist of genets, mongooses, felids, bat-eared foxes (Otocyon megalotis) and even black-backed jackals (Canis mesomelas), apparently carnivores can become more significant in human developed areas.[70][71] Although any prey weighing over 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) is rarely taken, some ungulates hunted by Verreaux's eagles can be considerably larger.[15] Adult klipspringer (Oreotragus oreotragus) are known to be hunted, and one eagle brought klipspringer lamb around 12 kg (26 lb) in weight to the nest.[60][72] A Verreaux's eagle was observed to hunt and kill a mountain reedbuck lamb estimated to weigh 15 kg (33 lb).[73] The smallest known mammalian prey was a 97.6 g (3.44 oz) Cape gerbil (Gerbilliscus afra).[66][74]

Interspecies competition edit

 
A Verreaux's eagle finds itself attacked by a lanner falcon when it enters the latter's home range, but the falcon quickly veers off when the eagle presents its talons.

Although it is the most specialized predator of rock hyrax in the world, it does not have monopoly on this prey. Many other predators also hunt rock hyraxes, which thus puts them in potential competition with the Verreaux's eagles. Amongst the other very large eagles which are widely found in sub-Saharan Africa, both the crowned eagle and the martial eagle may also locally favor rock hyraxes in their diets. However, these species have highly different habitat preferences and hunting techniques. The crowned eagle, a forest-dwelling species, is primarily a perch-hunter and can spend hours watching for prey activity from a prominent tree perch. The martial eagle is a dweller mainly of lightly wooded savanna and often hunts on the wing, soaring high and watching for prey activity with its superb vision, quite unlike the contour-hunting technique used by Verreaux's eagles. While the habitats of crowned and Verreaux's eagle keep them segregated enough to likely eliminate competition, confrontations between Verreaux's and martial eagles have been recorded. Although somewhat larger and more powerful, the martial eagle is relatively less nimble in the air and there is a case where a martial eagle was robbed of rock hyrax prey by a Verreaux's eagle.[15][24] Another case of kleptoparasitism by a Verreaux's eagle involved one stealing some carrion from a lammergeier (Gypaetus barbatus).[15] Verreaux's eagles occasionally prey on other large raptors including vultures, including white-headed vulture (Trigonoceps occipitalis), white-backed vulture (Gyps africanus) and Cape vulture (Gyps coprotheres), though the earlier cases probably refer to nestling or juvenile predation and the latter to nest defense on the part of the eagles.[50][64][75] An apparent predation attempt on a full grown juvenile Rüppell's griffon (Gyps rueppellii) was abortive.[76] A unique opportunity to study Verreaux's eagle living with its closest extant cousin, the golden eagle, has been afforded in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia. The two species, with similar habitat preferences, were observed to defend their territories from one another exclusively, with many cases of goldens chasing Verreaux's eagles out of their respective territories in flight and only one of Verreaux's chasing the goldens. However, since the golden eagles prefer hares and Verreaux prefers rock hyraxes, they actually seem to have no deleterious effect on each other's breeding activities.[77] African hawk-eagles (Aquila spilogaster) may also take a few hyraxes, but are likely to avoid direct conflicts with their much larger cousins, so will tawny eagles (Aquila rapax).[24] Other predators of rock hyrax may include felids like African wildcats (Felis silvestris lybica), servals (Leptailurus serval), caracals (Caracal caracal) and leopards (Panthera pardus) as well as jackals (Canis ssp.), African rock pythons (Python sebae) and owls (mainly the large Verreaux's eagle-owl (Ketupa lacteus) or possibly the Cape eagle-owl (Bubo capensis)). Neonate rock hyraxes may fall prey to mongooses and venomous snakes like Egyptian cobras (Naja haje) and puff adders (Bitis arietans).[78][79] Due to the formidable range of competitors it pays for Verreaux's eagle to be cautious from the moment it bears down on its prey. Cases where pirating has been attempted has involved diverse carnivores like caracals and jackals. In at least one case, a Verreaux's eagle was observed to be displaced off a rodent-kill (likely a cane-rat) by an Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis).[80] Unlikely competitors for nest sites are known to have included baboons and even geese.[81][82] As is often the case with reintroduced eagles (i.e. seen even in the huge harpy eagle (Harpia harpyja)), reintroduced Verreaux's eagle may lose their fear of other predators to their own detriment and one such bird fell victim to a caracal.[83] Cases where Verreaux's eagles have swooped at leopards are not likely competitive but are more likely to try to displace the cat from their territory, and such attacks have occasionally had fatal results for the birds.[9][84] This species is not normally aggressive to humans but may swoop uncomfortably close when the nest is being investigated.[9]

Behavior edit

Territoriality and movements edit

A rough estimated average of home range size in Verreaux's eagle is 10.9 km2 (4.2 sq mi).[24] Density of breeding pairs varies from 1 pair per 10.3 km2 (4.0 sq mi) in the Matobo Hills, Zimbabwe, 1 pair per 24 km2 (9.3 sq mi) in the Karoo, 1 pair per 25 km2 (9.7 sq mi) in East Africa, 1 pair per 28 km2 (11 sq mi) in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia to a known maximum spacing of 1 pair per 35 to 65 km2 (14 to 25 sq mi) in the Magaliesberg and Drakensberg ranges.[2][50][85][86][87] The Matobo Hills reportedly has one of the greatest breeding densities known of any large eagle and territories are extremely stable through seasons and years. Such stable distributions are expected of long-lived raptors living in the tropics with a relatively stable food supply outside the seasonal variation of temperate zones.[88] While Matobo Hill home ranges ranged from 6 to 14 km2 (2.3 to 5.4 sq mi), most were observed to include about the same amount of kopje habitat (up to 5 km2 (1.9 sq mi)).[2] Populations fluctuate surprisingly little despite four-fold changes between peaks and troughs in hyrax numbers.[89] At troughs, eagles may temporarily disappear or switch to alternate prey. This is only especially marked in drought periods and on average occurs once every 20 years.[90] Some authors consider the Verreaux's eagle to be a partial migrant,[91] others describe it as sedentary.[92] This is more a matter of terminology than unclear behaviour, since this species is well known to behave like almost all raptors that breed in Sub-Saharan Africa. That is the young wander relatively widely once dispersed from their parent's territory but the adults generally remain sedentary on their home range for the remainder of their lives.[2]

Verreaux's eagle displays may potentially occur almost throughout the year. Frequently displays are in response to the presence of another soaring pair or after repelling a single intruder from the territory. They will also display if anxious about the nest when humans or other large mammals approach too closely.[24] The male's display often consists of him first flying up in an undulating flight with wings readily held spread or closed. Then, once at a great height, he plunges down as far as 305 m (1,001 ft) at a time, then quickly rises back up, sometimes swinging to and fro like the arms of a pendulum, at other times diving and rising along a straight line. These evolutions may be embellished with somersaults and sideways rolls at the peak before the descent.[9][24] Some displays involve pairs of eagles. A pair frequently circles or makes figures of eight over their territory. One bird may roll over and present claws in flight or the male may fly behind female with exaggeratedly upcurved wings.[15] It is now the prevalent thought that most displays in Aquila eagles are territorial, as they often occur along the boundary of a given home range rather than near the nest.[3] Displays with talon-grappling and tumbling are often aerial fights between territorial birds and occasionally the eagles may clasp and whirl downwards (one such fight reportedly resulting in the birds plunging into the sea).[9][15]

Breeding edit

 
A breeding pair of Verreaux's eagles.

In Zimbabwe, 60 pairs may nest in 620 km2 (240 sq mi), equivalent to 1 pair per 10.3 km2 (4.0 sq mi), but this is exceptional. In East Africa, one pair nests each 25 km2 (9.7 sq mi) and in South Africa sometimes as little as 1 pair per 10.2 to 15 km2 (3.9 to 5.8 sq mi), but nearer 60 km2 (23 sq mi) being more typical.[15] Verreaux's eagle may build from 1 to 3 nests, sometimes none over the course of a year. In the Matobo Hills, the average number of nests built per pair is 1.4.[24] Eagles nesting in the Karoo have much larger territories, though are subject to persecution and habitat change, more so than many other populations.[24] In the Matobos, the species is near the breeding population capacity level with almost unlimited nests that are rather unevenly distributed among available jumbles of rocky kopjes. In Kenya, nests are more scattered and Verreaux's eagle sometimes do not breed even where the habitat seems appropriate and there are good numbers of rock hyrax.[9] By virtue of location on a narrow ledge, nests tend to be much broader than deep and a relatively small for the size of the eagle.[9] The flattish nests, made out of green branches and lined with green leaves, are up to 1.8 m (71 in) across and 2 m (6.6 ft) deep. Though a nest depth of around 0.6 m (2.0 ft) is typical, one old nest was 4.1 m (13 ft) deep.[9][15] Typically nests are on cliffs, often in an overhung crevice or in a small cave, sometimes on an open ledge. The nest site is generally marked by a 'whitewash' which is formed by the birds' droppings.[93] Verreaux's is the most cliff dependent of all eagle species, in the late 1970s only 3 known nests were in trees.[24] Very rarely, they may nest in trees, such as Euphorbia or Acacia, often those growing out of a cliff crevice.[15] A handful of nests in South Africa have even been on electric pylons.[94] A new nest takes up to four months to construct, with some repair being typical upon each use. Both sexes participate in the nest construction, though the female usually takes the lead.[9] It may take several hundred feet of rope for a human to reach the nest.[9] Predation of young in the nest is either suspected or anecdotely reported as having been committed by African rock pythons, baboons and caracals. However, predation is believed to be normally quite rare, due to the combination of factors such as the inaccessibility of most nests by foot (thus cutting off all but the most nimble mammalian carnivores) and the bold defenses of the parent eagles.[2] Verreaux's eagle have reportedly dropped sticks on potential nest predators. This has been considered a form of tool-use, which is generally unknown in other raptorial birds and has been mostly reported in corvids and herons.[95]

Egg laying may occur from November to August in Sudan and Arabia, October to May in Ethiopia and Somalia, year around in East Africa (with a peak of June to December) and anywhere from April to November in Africa from Zambia southwards.[15] In an unusual behaviour for eagles, the males may bring food to females before egg laying and, more typically, males bring almost all food during the incubation stage.[2] Two eggs are generally laid, though a range of one to three is known. The eggs are rather elongated ovals and being chalky white sometimes with a bluish tinge or a few reddish-brown marking, measuring from 71 to 83.4 mm (2.80 to 3.28 in) in length and 56–62 mm (2.2–2.4 in) in width, with an average of 76.9 mm × 58.6 mm (3.03 in × 2.31 in).[9] The eggs are laid at three-day intervals starting in the middle of the day. Both sexes incubate, but the female takes the major share and tends to sit all night over them. Sometimes, the male may sit for 40-50% of the day with more shifts for him towards the end of incubation. These are close-sitters, which are not easily disturbed off the nest.[9] Incubation is 43 to 47 days. Hatching happens at about to 2–3 days apart, with about 24 hours from the first chipping of the egg's surface to complete hatching. One egg is sometimes infertile and the second egg tends to be about 10% smaller.[9] The Verreaux's eagle is considered an “obligate cainist”, that is the older sibling normally kills the younger one (in more than 90% of observed nests), by either starvation or direct attack. Aggression may continue for up to 70 days after hatching.[2][96] At one time no cases of two young successfully reaching the fledging stage were known, however a couple of cases of two healthy fledglings from a nest have been recorded.[9] Siblicide is regularly observed in raptorial birds, including unrelated families like owls and skuas and is common, even typical, in Aquila eagles. The behaviour is most commonly explained as a kind of insurance policy, with the second nestling existing both to act as a backup if the first egg or nestling perishes and to mitigate the stressful workload demanded of the parent raptors in feeding, brooding and defending the young.[96] The odds of survival for the second fledging are better in the golden eagle and other temperate-breeding Aquila eagles, possibly due to a shorter nesting stage in these species.[96] In roughly 20% of golden eagle nests and in some cases, such as prey-rich areas of North America, about half of the nests will successfully produce two fledglings.[3] In the Verreaux's eagle, no food is given to the hatchling in the first 36 hours, thereafter they are regularly fed.[2] Early in the fledging stage, the young is brooded up to 90% of the time. After 20 days, parents spend up to 20% of time with their eaglet around the nest, not brooding in daylight after 21 days. Feathers appear through the down at about 34 days, by 60 days feathers cover the down.[9] In Equatorial Africa, the eaglet fledges from the nest at 95–99 days, though sometimes as little as 90 days further south. In the golden eagle, the fledging stage is roughly 35 days shorter.[24] The young Verreaux's eagle takes its first flight and then returns to the nest for the first fortnight.[9] In the early fledging period, the male brings more food, later it is largely the female. At some point during the post-fledging stage, she ceases to roost with the young one and sits with the male at some distance, a behaviour that seems to vary from nest to nest in timing. After 45–50 days, food is caught by the parents but is likely eaten by themselves and not brought to the young. After leaving the nest, family parties may be together for up to 6 months. The eaglet grows stronger after the first month and accompanies the parents on hunting forays away from the nest. It often breeds every year, occasionally only on every other year.[9]

Population and status edit

 
A Verreaux's eagle at Giant's Castle.

Verreaux's eagles’ nests are estimated to have a 40–50% success rate per year.[9] Success of nesting is significantly higher when hyrax are common: 0.56 young per year dropped to 0.28 young per year. In fact, in poor food areas no breeding attempt commonly occurred (66% did not attempt to breed) whereas 24% did not attempt to breed in better food areas. Frequency of breeding attempts is lower in wetter years. Near 90% attempted nesting in years with 300 mm (12 in) of rainfall whereas 45% attempted during years with roughly 1,000 mm (39 in) rainfall.[90] In the Matobo Hills, persistent intrusion by an unmated adult into a pair's nesting territory seemed to have an adverse effect on nesting success.[97]

The estimated average lifespan is 16 years.[9] Verreaux's eagle has a total population estimated very roughly to be somewhere in the tens of thousands in total. In northeastern South Africa, the local breeding population is estimated to include 240 pairs, while the western Cape region of the country may hold possibly more than 2,000 pairs.[35][87] Verreaux's eagle lives in kopje habitat, which is generally non-vulnerable to human destruction, unlike, say, the savanna inhabited by martial eagles or the forests inhabited by crowned eagles.[15] Unlike the other two big African eagles, they do not often partake of much carrion, so are at little risk of poisoning from carcass left out to control jackals.[15] Nonetheless, some people shoot at or otherwise persecute them when given the opportunity due to the largely mistaken belief that they are a threat to small livestock.[69]

Perhaps the greatest concern for the species is when rock hyraxes are locally hunted by humans for food and skins, leading to likely declines and requiring the eagles to either switch to other prey or have their nesting attempts fail. In Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in South Africa, despite an appreciable decline in rock hyrax populations, breeding data revealed few changes in the incubation period, nestling period and post-fledging dispersal period in two known pairs of the eagles.[63] At this same site, despite it being one of the most popular nature areas in metropolitan Johannesburg, high levels of human activity have had no apparent adverse effect on the eagles’ breeding behaviour (by contrast, when exposed to similar levels of disturbance, golden eagles have been shown to temporarily abandon their nests).[3][98] However, in South Africa, the overall number of pairs declined from 78 in 1980 (25 in reserves) to 27 in 1988 (with 19 in preserves).[15] In the Sisulu Botanical Garden, artificial feeding has been contemplated to maintain a breeding pair in the face of continuing declines of available wild prey.[98]

References edit

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  • 'Alan and Meg Kemp; 2001; Birds of Prey of Africa and its Islands; SASOL, p. 78
  • 'Wonderboom Urban Verreaux's Eagle Project' http://www.blackeagleswb.com

External links edit

  •   Media related to Verreaux's eagle at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Verreaux's eagle at Wikispecies
  • (Verreaux's eagle = ) Black eagle Aquila verreauxii - Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds

verreaux, eagle, aquila, verreauxii, large, mostly, african, bird, prey, also, called, black, eagle, especially, southern, africa, confused, with, black, eagle, ictinaetus, malayensis, south, southeast, asia, lives, hilly, mountainous, regions, southern, easte. Verreaux s eagle Aquila verreauxii is a large mostly African bird of prey It is also called the black eagle especially in southern Africa not to be confused with the black eagle Ictinaetus malayensis of south and southeast Asia 2 The Verreaux s eagle lives in hilly and mountainous regions of southern and eastern Africa extending marginally into Chad Mali and Niger and very locally in the Middle East Verreaux s eagleAt the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in Roodepoort South AfricaConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder AccipitriformesFamily AccipitridaeGenus AquilaSpecies A verreauxiiBinomial nameAquila verreauxiiLesson RP 1831 range of Verreaux s eagleVerreaux s eagle is one of the most specialized species of accipitrid in the world with its distribution and life history revolving around its favorite prey species the rock hyraxes When hyrax populations decline the species have been shown to survive with mixed success on other prey such as small antelopes gamebirds hares monkeys and other assorted vertebrates Despite a high degree of specialization Verreaux s eagle has from a conservation standpoint been faring relatively well in historic times One population of this species in the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe is arguably the best studied eagle population in the world having been subject to continuous detailed study since the late 1950s 2 3 Like all eagles this species belongs to the taxonomic order Accipitriformes formerly included in Falconiformes and the family Accipitridae which may be referred to colloquially as accipitrids or raptors Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Voice 3 Habitat and distribution 4 Dietary ecology 4 1 Other prey 4 2 Interspecies competition 5 Behavior 5 1 Territoriality and movements 5 2 Breeding 6 Population and status 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp Illustration from the species description by Lesson published in 1830 4 This species was first described by Rene Primevere Lesson in his 1830 publication Centurie zoologique ou choix d animaux rares nouveaux ou imparfaitement connus as Aquila Verreauxii 5 The species name commemorates the French naturalist Jules Verreaux who visited southern Africa in the early 19th century and collected the type specimen for the French Academy of Sciences 6 7 Verreaux s eagle is part of a broad group of raptors called booted eagles which are defined by the feature that all included species have feathering over their tarsus whereas most other accipitrids have bare legs Included in this group are all species described as hawk eagles including the genera Spizaetus and Nisaetus as well as assorted monotypical genera such as Oroaetus Lophaetus Stephanoaetus Polemaetus Lophotriorchis and Ictinaetus The genus Aquila is distributed across every continent but for South America and Antarctica Up to 20 species have been classified in the genus but the taxonomic placement of some of the traditionally included species has recently been questioned Traditionally the Aquila eagles have been grouped superficially as largish mainly brownish or dark colored booted eagles that vary little in transition from their juvenile to their adult plumages Genetic research has recently shown the Verreaux s eagle is included in a clade with its nearest relatives the sister species Bonelli s eagle A fasciatus and African hawk eagle A spilogaster as well as the golden eagle More distantly related are the sister species pair the wedge tailed eagle A audax and Gurney s eagle A gurneyi 8 Closely related to this clade are the Cassin s hawk eagle A africanus 8 Some of the relationships within this group have long been suspected based on morphological similarities among the large bodied species 9 The identification of the smaller much paler bellied A fasciatus and A spilogaster as members of the clade was a surprise given that they were previously included in the genus Hieraaetus 3 10 11 Cassin s hawk eagle has been assigned to both the Hieraaetus group and the Spizaetus Nisaetus hawk eagle group but is now known based on this genetic data to also nest within Aquila 8 Other largish Aquila species the eastern imperial eagle A heliaca the Spanish imperial eagle A adaberti the tawny eagle A rapax and the steppe eagles A nipalensis are now thought to be a separate close knit clade which attained some characteristics similar to those of the prior clade via convergent evolution 10 11 Genetically the spotted eagles C pomarina C hastata amp C clanga have been discovered to be more closely related to the long crested eagle Lophaetus occipitalis and the black eagle 10 12 and have been transferred to the genus Clanga 8 The genus Hieraaetus traditionally including the booted eagle H pennatus little eagle H morphnoides and Ayres s hawk eagle H ayresii consists of much smaller species that are in fact the smallest birds called eagles outside of the unrelated Spilornis serpent eagle genus This genus has recently been eliminated by many authorities and is now occasionally also included in Aquila although not all ornithological unions have followed this suit in this re classification 3 11 13 The small bodied Wahlberg s eagle H wahlbergi has been traditionally considered an Aquila species due to its lack of change from juvenile to adult plumage and brownish color but it is actually genetically aligned to the Hieraaetus lineage 10 14 Description edit nbsp Portrait of Aquila verreauxii nbsp Adult Verreaux s eagle in flight in South Africa Verreaux s eagle is a very large eagle It measures 75 to 96 cm 30 to 38 in long from the bill to the tip of the tail making it the sixth longest eagle in the world 15 Males can weigh 3 to 4 2 kg 6 6 to 9 3 lb and the larger females weigh 3 1 to 7 kg 6 8 to 15 4 lb The average weight is approximately 4 19 kg 9 2 lb based on the weights of 21 eagles of both sexes Other reported mean body mass measurements of Verreaux s eagles were lower however with seven unsexed birds averaging 3 32 kg 7 3 lb while four unsexed eagles in an additional study averaged 3 72 kg 8 2 lb In yet another study seven males were found to average 3 76 kg 8 3 lb and seven females to average 4 31 kg 9 5 lb In another group of weighed eagles four females were found to average 4 6 kg 10 lb It is the seventh or eighth heaviest living eagle in the world In average mass and overall weight range if not linear measurements the Verreaux s is very similar in size to its occasional competitor the martial eagle which is regularly titled the largest of the African eagles It also rivals the martial and golden eagles as the largest extant member of the booted eagle clan 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 It has a wingspan of 1 81 to 2 3 m 5 ft 11 in to 7 ft 7 in 15 22 The wing chord of the male is 56 5 to 59 5 cm 22 2 to 23 4 in and that of the female is 59 to 64 cm 23 to 25 in Among other standard measurements in the Verreaux s eagles both sexes measure 27 2 to 36 cm 10 7 to 14 2 in in tail length and 9 5 to 11 cm 3 7 to 4 3 in in tarsus 9 15 Other than the female s slight size advantage adult males and females are physically indistinguishable from each other 15 Adult Verreaux s eagles are mostly jet black in color 9 The yellow coloration of the cere the bill is gun metal grey eye ring and eye brows all stand out in contrast to the black plumage 15 Even more prominent on flying birds when seen from above is the white on the back rump and upper tail coverts and part of the scapulars which forms a V shaped patch although this feature is partially obscured in perched birds 9 Adults also have conspicuous white windows on the wing quills at the carpal joint at the base of the primaries when seen flying both from above and below 9 15 The bill is stout the head is prominent on the relatively long neck and the legs are fully feathered 15 nbsp Juvenile Verreaux s eagle Juvenile and immature plumages differ markedly from the plumage of adults They are overall a dark brown color 23 Immatures have a strongly contrasting golden crown and a rufous or ginger nape and mantle They have small white streaks on the forehead and black on their cheeks The throat is dark streaked the lower throat is pale brown and the upper chest is brown 15 The rest of the underside is brown but for a blackish blotched rufous to cream colored abdomen and lightly marked creamy thighs and legs The feathers of the upper tail and upper wing coverts are brown with white streaks in young birds while the other tail and wing quills are nearly black The wing quills when seen from below in flight show considerable whitish mottling with more extensive white than is typically seen in adult plumages The immature has a dark brown iris and yellowish feet 9 Black feathers increase from 2 to 5 years of age amongst a scattering of brown tipped feathers though the contrasting creamy trousers are maintained through the 3rd year By the 4th year they look dark grey brown with a buff patch on the nape and mottling of retained brownish feathers At the end of the subadult phase at around 5 years of age the plumage is practically indistinguishable from the adult 24 Full adult plumage is probably attained in 5 to 6 years 25 nbsp Subadult Verreaux s eagle flyingThe Verreaux s eagle is essentially unmistakable especially in adulthood No other black colored raptor in its range approaches this species large size nor possesses its distinctive patterns of white 15 The golden eagle is of similar size or marginally larger size and the two species are the heaviest living Aquila species and measure only marginally less than the slightly lighter weight Australasian wedge tailed eagle in total wing and bill to tail length 3 While the juvenile Verreaux s eagle is quite different from the adult s its plumage is no less distinctive No other accipitrid shares the mottled brownish body blackish wings with large white patches or contrasting whitish rufous and golden color around the head and neck The flight profile of Verreaux s eagle is also distinctive it is the only Aquila species other than the golden eagle to soar in a pronounced dihedral with the wings held slightly above the back and primaries upturned at the tip to make a V shape In the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia and possibly in some parts of the Arabian Peninsula and the southwestern edge of the Middle East the ranges of the golden and Verreaux s eagles overlap but the golden is a mostly brown bird and shares none of the Verreaux s black plumage The immature golden eagle has white patches on its underwing as do Verreaux s but they are less extensive than those of the latter species The wing shape also differs from the golden s as the Verreaux s eagle has very broad outer secondaries and a relatively narrow pinch at the base of the primaries whereas the tapering of a golden eagle s wing is more gradual The Verreaux s eagle wings have variously been described as paddle spoon or leaf shaped 9 15 Imperial eagles too have white markings on their wing coverts but are different in flight profile flatter winged and overall coloration dark brown 15 Voice edit nbsp A captive Verreaux s eagle in South Africa This species is largely silent though is arguably a stronger vocalist than its close cousin the golden eagle 15 Chicking and chirruping sounds like that of a young turkey or francolin pyuck have been heard in various contexts such as pairs being reunited More striking sounds are loud ringing whaeee whaeee heeeee oh or keeooo keeooo calls used as contact calls or during intruder chases Various screams barks yelps and mews have been heard to be issued at potential mammalian predators 9 15 The young emits feeble chirps at first later more likely to cluck like the adults 9 Habitat and distribution editVerreaux s eagle has specific habitat requirements and is rare outside of its particular habitat type It lives in kopjes which are dry rocky environments in anything from rocky hills to high mountains amongst cliffs gorges and inselbergs often surrounded by savanna thornbush and sub desert 15 It is often found in dry areas with less than 60 cm 24 in of average annual rainfall It is highest ranging in elevation in Ethiopia and East Africa where found up to 4 000 m 13 000 ft above sea level 9 Verreaux s eagle is found from the Marra Mountains 26 of Sudan southward through that country 27 to 16 N in Eritrea 28 along the northern mountains of Somalia 29 in much of Ethiopia mostly the central mountainous spine 30 possibly some mountains in northeastern Uganda 31 Kenya easternmost Democratic Republic of the Congo and possibly Tanzania 15 Southeastern Africa is the heart of the Verreaux s eagle range they are found in most mountain ranges in Malawi but for the Nyika Plateau the Mafinga Hills and the Lulwe Hills 32 in Zambia especially the escarpments bordering Lake Kariba to the gorges below Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe especially east of the central plateau 33 Mozambique Eswatini 34 Lesotho and down into South Africa where they largely inhabit the Karoo along the cliffs of the Great Escarpment the Cape Fold Mountains and Cape Peninsula 35 36 37 A somewhat more sparse distribution is known in Botswana western Namibia and southwestern Angola in the Serra da Chela 38 39 Elsewhere in Africa the Verreaux s eagle may be found but tends to be rare and only spottily seen such as in eastern Mali northeastern Chad 40 the Air Mountains of Niger 41 and southwestern Cameroon where known only as a vagrant 42 In 1968 only a single record of Verreaux s eagle from Jordan was known from outside of Africa but now it is known to be a rare breeder in the Middle East from a handful of immature records and territorial adult behavior breeding has been inferred in Lebanon 43 44 Israel 45 Oman 46 Saudi Arabia 47 and Yemen 48 49 nbsp A kopje in the Matobo Hills home to the highest density of Verreaux s eagle nbsp A nest at the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in Roodepoort South Africa nbsp View of two nests used by the same pair at the Roodekrans beside Witpoortjie Waterfall Walter Sisulu Botanical GardenDietary ecology edit nbsp Few accipitrids are as specialized as the Verreaux s eagle One of their two favored prey species Cape hyrax Two species comprise considerably more than half of often more than 90 of the Verreaux s eagle s diet the Cape hyrax Procavia capensis and the yellow spotted rock hyrax Heterohyrax brucei Few other accipitrids are as singularly specialized to hunt a single prey family as Verreaux s eagles perhaps excluding the snail kite Rostrhamus sociabilis and the slender billed kite Helicolestes hamatus with their specialization on Pomacea snails Not even accipitrids named after their staple food are known to be as specialized i e the bat hawk Macheiramphus alcinus palm nut vulture Gypohierax angolensis lizard buzzard Kaupifalco monogrammicus and perhaps the rufous crab hawk Buteogallus aequinoctialis Certainly the Verreaux s eagle has the most conservative diet of Aquila species though the diet is more diverse in South Africa than in Zimbabwe 50 In the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe the two hyraxes comprised 1 448 out of 1 550 eagle prey items recorded at eyries just after the breeding season from 1995 to 2003 51 In the same area from 1957 to 1990 98 1 of the diet was made up of rock hyrax 2 In a sample size of 224 from 102 nests in Serengeti National Park in Tanzania 99 1 of the remains were of hyrax 52 Elsewhere in Tanzania the diet is more mixed with 53 7 of the remains from 24 nests made up of hyrax 53 In a nest in South Africa 89 1 of the remains from a sampling of 55 were of hyrax 54 No detailed statistics are known but the hyrax are likely to the main prey in every population and have been mentioned to dominate the diet in Mozambique 55 Malawi 32 and Botswana 56 Around 400 hyrax may be taken through the year by a pair with young 15 The entire distribution of the species neatly corresponds with that of the two species of rock hyrax 9 To date there are no known instances of Verreaux s eagle hunting the two species of tree hyraxes 50 In the first 10 years of constant observation of the population from the Matobo Hills only two kills were witnessed However enough hunting behavior has been ultimately observed to give a good idea how a Verreaux s eagle obtains its prey 24 This species most often forages in low level quartering flight with the rock hyraxes chiefly caught after a rapid somewhat twisting dive in the few seconds after the eagle surprises the hyrax Like the golden eagle Verreaux s eagle uses natural contours of the ground in rocky and mountainous habitats to increase the element of surprise as hyraxes appropriately considering their diverse range of predators tend to be highly wary 15 50 Verreaux s eagle have been known to hunt from a perch though rarely 9 57 Hunting hyrax cooperatively has been recorded with one eagle of a pair flying past and distracting the prey while the other strikes from behind Verreaux s eagle may knock hyraxes off cliffs and take arboreal prey from treetops but it usually kills on the ground 15 The daily estimate food requirements of this species are around 350 g 12 oz nearly a third more than that of a golden eagle despite the latter s marginally heavier body weight 24 Rock hyraxes are often difficult to observe for humans other than a glimpse but a Verreaux s eagle can fly out and then return to the nest with a kill in the matter of a few minutes 24 Of the two species regularly taken the yellow spotted rock hyrax can weigh from 1 to 3 63 kg 2 2 to 8 0 lb with an average of 2 4 kg 5 3 lb although specimens from Zimbabwe are noticeably heavier and larger than specimens from Serengeti National Park Cape hyrax weighing from 1 8 to 5 5 kg 4 0 to 12 1 lb with average of around 3 14 kg 6 9 lb can be even larger than the Verreaux s eagles themselves so can be more difficult to kill Yellow spotted rock hyraxes are more often taken in the Matobo Hills perhaps because of their smaller size or its more diurnal habits Adult rock hyraxes are disproportionately selected perhaps due to being out in the open more regularly In Cape hyraxes 1 to 2 year old males are particularly vulnerable since they are forced to disperse at sexual maturity Juvenile hyraxes constituted from 11 33 of prey remains in the Western Cape while 18 of hyraxes killed were juveniles in Matobo Hills Because of their greater weight Cape hyraxes are frequently either consumed at the kill site putting the eagle at risk of losing prey to competing predators or to attack by large mammalian carnivores or are decapitated and brought to the nest or perch Fewer skulls or jaws of Cape hyraxes than of yellow spotted rock hyraxes have been found at nest sites 58 59 However the Cape hyrax has a wider distribution than the yellow spotted and the Verreaux s eagle may hunt the Cape hyrax almost exclusively outside of the long band of eastern Africa where the smaller species is distributed 50 In comparison to the golden eagle Verreaux s eagle has a foot pad that about 20 wider which may be an adaptation to taking the bulky and broad backed rock hyrax 60 The foot of the Verreaux s eagle is reportedly larger than a human hand 61 The enlarged rear hallux claw of a Verreaux s at an average of 52 3 mm 2 06 in in 4 females and 49 1 mm 1 93 in in 5 males is quite similar in size to that of a golden eagle 21 In South Africa where the Cape hyrax is the main prey species the estimated mean size of prey taken to the nest is around 2 6 kg 5 7 lb perhaps twice as heavy as prey taken by some nesting golden eagles 60 However the mean size of prey taken by Verreaux s eagle in the Matobo Hills with more yellow spotted rock hyrax was around 1 82 kg 4 0 lb around the same estimated weight as prey taken by golden eagles in Europe and smaller than the average estimated mass of prey taken to golden eagle nests in regions like Scotland or Mongolia 3 62 Other prey edit nbsp An adult Verreaux s eagle carrying avian prey Verreaux s eagle are capable of taking diverse prey but this is infrequent in areas with healthy rock hyrax populations Cases where more diverse food is brought to the nest are usually either considered to be areas where rock hyrax populations have declined or areas where eagles occupy home ranges which included non rocky habitat such as savanna which are described by Valerie Gargett as poor food areas due to their lack of hyrax 2 63 In such areas about 80 of prey is mammalian 9 Verreaux s eagles that are less specialized have diets and hunting capacities that are similar to those of the golden eagle although the latter species often subsists on hares rabbits ground squirrels or grouse for about half or two thirds of its diet a portion still comprised by rock hyrax in the Verreaux s 2 3 One study accumulated records of Verreaux s eagle preying on at least 100 prey species 64 Other prey types recorded have included small mainly juvenile antelopes hares rabbits meerkats Suricata suricatta other mongooses monkeys squirrels cane rats bushbabies and lambs Ovis aries and kids Capra aegagrus hircus Francolin Francolinus ssp and guineafowl Numina ssp as well as waterfowl herons egrets bustards pigeons crows Corvus ssp doves chickens Gallus gallus domesticus and a great sparrowhawk Accipiter melanoleucus have been among the recorded avian prey 15 65 Avian prey ranging in size from 102 6 g 3 62 oz alpine swift Tachymarptis melba to 7 26 kg 16 0 lb adult male Denham s bustards Neotis denhami 16 66 67 In Tanzania out of a sample size of 41 from 26 nests 53 7 of remains were of hyraxes 29 3 of francolins guineafowl and chickens 12 2 of antelopes 2 4 of hares and rabbits and 2 4 of mongoose 53 Tortoises made up 145 of 5748 from 73 sites 2 5 in South Africa Rarely snakes and lizards may also be taken and even termites have been eaten by this species 15 24 In South Africa the commonest foods were in descending order of preference Cape hyrax Smith s red rock hare Pronolagus rupertris meerkat mountain reedbuck Redunca fulvorufula goats and sheep scrub hare Lepus saxatilis Cape francolin Francolinus capensis helmeted guineafowl Numida meleagris yellow mongoose Cynictis penicillata and Angulate tortoise Chersina angulata 15 In poor food areas of the Matobo Hills three nests included 53 6 hyrax 10 7 cane rats 7 1 monkeys 7 1 mongoose and 3 6 antelope 2 From 1997 to 2005 in the same area non hyrax prey each representing less than 10 out of 1550 prey items at nests included white tailed mongoose Ichneumia albicauda steenbok Raphicerus campestris domestic goat vervet monkey Chlorocebus pygerythrus Jameson s red rock hare Pronolagus randensis helmeted guineafowl Swainson s francolin Pternistis swainsonii Natal francolin Pternistis natalensis southern red billed hornbill Tockus rufirostris rock pigeon Columba livia white necked raven Corvus albicollis leopard tortoise Stigmochelys pardalis and giant plated lizard Gerrhosaurus validus 51 In the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden of South Africa the primary prey found around nests after a perceptible hyrax decline has become helmeted guineafowl and francolins followed by cane rats rabbits and dikdiks Rhynchotragus ssp 63 Young baboons may also be hunted even the large bodied chacma baboons Papio ursinus which have issued a predator alarm call in response to the presence of Verreaux s eagles 68 Carrion either fairly frequent or none at all 2 57 A study of the taking of domestic lambs in the Karoo found only two cases of lambs being eaten by Verreaux s eagle and these were already dead when carried off This contrasts with the golden eagle which in some areas may eat many dead lambs and occasionally hunt lives ones 3 69 An impressive range of mammalIan carnivores is known to be taken by Verreaux s eagles Some of these may consist of genets mongooses felids bat eared foxes Otocyon megalotis and even black backed jackals Canis mesomelas apparently carnivores can become more significant in human developed areas 70 71 Although any prey weighing over 4 5 kg 9 9 lb is rarely taken some ungulates hunted by Verreaux s eagles can be considerably larger 15 Adult klipspringer Oreotragus oreotragus are known to be hunted and one eagle brought klipspringer lamb around 12 kg 26 lb in weight to the nest 60 72 A Verreaux s eagle was observed to hunt and kill a mountain reedbuck lamb estimated to weigh 15 kg 33 lb 73 The smallest known mammalian prey was a 97 6 g 3 44 oz Cape gerbil Gerbilliscus afra 66 74 Interspecies competition edit nbsp A Verreaux s eagle finds itself attacked by a lanner falcon when it enters the latter s home range but the falcon quickly veers off when the eagle presents its talons Although it is the most specialized predator of rock hyrax in the world it does not have monopoly on this prey Many other predators also hunt rock hyraxes which thus puts them in potential competition with the Verreaux s eagles Amongst the other very large eagles which are widely found in sub Saharan Africa both the crowned eagle and the martial eagle may also locally favor rock hyraxes in their diets However these species have highly different habitat preferences and hunting techniques The crowned eagle a forest dwelling species is primarily a perch hunter and can spend hours watching for prey activity from a prominent tree perch The martial eagle is a dweller mainly of lightly wooded savanna and often hunts on the wing soaring high and watching for prey activity with its superb vision quite unlike the contour hunting technique used by Verreaux s eagles While the habitats of crowned and Verreaux s eagle keep them segregated enough to likely eliminate competition confrontations between Verreaux s and martial eagles have been recorded Although somewhat larger and more powerful the martial eagle is relatively less nimble in the air and there is a case where a martial eagle was robbed of rock hyrax prey by a Verreaux s eagle 15 24 Another case of kleptoparasitism by a Verreaux s eagle involved one stealing some carrion from a lammergeier Gypaetus barbatus 15 Verreaux s eagles occasionally prey on other large raptors including vultures including white headed vulture Trigonoceps occipitalis white backed vulture Gyps africanus and Cape vulture Gyps coprotheres though the earlier cases probably refer to nestling or juvenile predation and the latter to nest defense on the part of the eagles 50 64 75 An apparent predation attempt on a full grown juvenile Ruppell s griffon Gyps rueppellii was abortive 76 A unique opportunity to study Verreaux s eagle living with its closest extant cousin the golden eagle has been afforded in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia The two species with similar habitat preferences were observed to defend their territories from one another exclusively with many cases of goldens chasing Verreaux s eagles out of their respective territories in flight and only one of Verreaux s chasing the goldens However since the golden eagles prefer hares and Verreaux prefers rock hyraxes they actually seem to have no deleterious effect on each other s breeding activities 77 African hawk eagles Aquila spilogaster may also take a few hyraxes but are likely to avoid direct conflicts with their much larger cousins so will tawny eagles Aquila rapax 24 Other predators of rock hyrax may include felids like African wildcats Felis silvestris lybica servals Leptailurus serval caracals Caracal caracal and leopards Panthera pardus as well as jackals Canis ssp African rock pythons Python sebae and owls mainly the large Verreaux s eagle owl Ketupa lacteus or possibly the Cape eagle owl Bubo capensis Neonate rock hyraxes may fall prey to mongooses and venomous snakes like Egyptian cobras Naja haje and puff adders Bitis arietans 78 79 Due to the formidable range of competitors it pays for Verreaux s eagle to be cautious from the moment it bears down on its prey Cases where pirating has been attempted has involved diverse carnivores like caracals and jackals In at least one case a Verreaux s eagle was observed to be displaced off a rodent kill likely a cane rat by an Ethiopian wolf Canis simensis 80 Unlikely competitors for nest sites are known to have included baboons and even geese 81 82 As is often the case with reintroduced eagles i e seen even in the huge harpy eagle Harpia harpyja reintroduced Verreaux s eagle may lose their fear of other predators to their own detriment and one such bird fell victim to a caracal 83 Cases where Verreaux s eagles have swooped at leopards are not likely competitive but are more likely to try to displace the cat from their territory and such attacks have occasionally had fatal results for the birds 9 84 This species is not normally aggressive to humans but may swoop uncomfortably close when the nest is being investigated 9 Behavior editTerritoriality and movements edit A rough estimated average of home range size in Verreaux s eagle is 10 9 km2 4 2 sq mi 24 Density of breeding pairs varies from 1 pair per 10 3 km2 4 0 sq mi in the Matobo Hills Zimbabwe 1 pair per 24 km2 9 3 sq mi in the Karoo 1 pair per 25 km2 9 7 sq mi in East Africa 1 pair per 28 km2 11 sq mi in the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia to a known maximum spacing of 1 pair per 35 to 65 km2 14 to 25 sq mi in the Magaliesberg and Drakensberg ranges 2 50 85 86 87 The Matobo Hills reportedly has one of the greatest breeding densities known of any large eagle and territories are extremely stable through seasons and years Such stable distributions are expected of long lived raptors living in the tropics with a relatively stable food supply outside the seasonal variation of temperate zones 88 While Matobo Hill home ranges ranged from 6 to 14 km2 2 3 to 5 4 sq mi most were observed to include about the same amount of kopje habitat up to 5 km2 1 9 sq mi 2 Populations fluctuate surprisingly little despite four fold changes between peaks and troughs in hyrax numbers 89 At troughs eagles may temporarily disappear or switch to alternate prey This is only especially marked in drought periods and on average occurs once every 20 years 90 Some authors consider the Verreaux s eagle to be a partial migrant 91 others describe it as sedentary 92 This is more a matter of terminology than unclear behaviour since this species is well known to behave like almost all raptors that breed in Sub Saharan Africa That is the young wander relatively widely once dispersed from their parent s territory but the adults generally remain sedentary on their home range for the remainder of their lives 2 Verreaux s eagle displays may potentially occur almost throughout the year Frequently displays are in response to the presence of another soaring pair or after repelling a single intruder from the territory They will also display if anxious about the nest when humans or other large mammals approach too closely 24 The male s display often consists of him first flying up in an undulating flight with wings readily held spread or closed Then once at a great height he plunges down as far as 305 m 1 001 ft at a time then quickly rises back up sometimes swinging to and fro like the arms of a pendulum at other times diving and rising along a straight line These evolutions may be embellished with somersaults and sideways rolls at the peak before the descent 9 24 Some displays involve pairs of eagles A pair frequently circles or makes figures of eight over their territory One bird may roll over and present claws in flight or the male may fly behind female with exaggeratedly upcurved wings 15 It is now the prevalent thought that most displays in Aquila eagles are territorial as they often occur along the boundary of a given home range rather than near the nest 3 Displays with talon grappling and tumbling are often aerial fights between territorial birds and occasionally the eagles may clasp and whirl downwards one such fight reportedly resulting in the birds plunging into the sea 9 15 Breeding edit nbsp A breeding pair of Verreaux s eagles In Zimbabwe 60 pairs may nest in 620 km2 240 sq mi equivalent to 1 pair per 10 3 km2 4 0 sq mi but this is exceptional In East Africa one pair nests each 25 km2 9 7 sq mi and in South Africa sometimes as little as 1 pair per 10 2 to 15 km2 3 9 to 5 8 sq mi but nearer 60 km2 23 sq mi being more typical 15 Verreaux s eagle may build from 1 to 3 nests sometimes none over the course of a year In the Matobo Hills the average number of nests built per pair is 1 4 24 Eagles nesting in the Karoo have much larger territories though are subject to persecution and habitat change more so than many other populations 24 In the Matobos the species is near the breeding population capacity level with almost unlimited nests that are rather unevenly distributed among available jumbles of rocky kopjes In Kenya nests are more scattered and Verreaux s eagle sometimes do not breed even where the habitat seems appropriate and there are good numbers of rock hyrax 9 By virtue of location on a narrow ledge nests tend to be much broader than deep and a relatively small for the size of the eagle 9 The flattish nests made out of green branches and lined with green leaves are up to 1 8 m 71 in across and 2 m 6 6 ft deep Though a nest depth of around 0 6 m 2 0 ft is typical one old nest was 4 1 m 13 ft deep 9 15 Typically nests are on cliffs often in an overhung crevice or in a small cave sometimes on an open ledge The nest site is generally marked by a whitewash which is formed by the birds droppings 93 Verreaux s is the most cliff dependent of all eagle species in the late 1970s only 3 known nests were in trees 24 Very rarely they may nest in trees such as Euphorbia or Acacia often those growing out of a cliff crevice 15 A handful of nests in South Africa have even been on electric pylons 94 A new nest takes up to four months to construct with some repair being typical upon each use Both sexes participate in the nest construction though the female usually takes the lead 9 It may take several hundred feet of rope for a human to reach the nest 9 Predation of young in the nest is either suspected or anecdotely reported as having been committed by African rock pythons baboons and caracals However predation is believed to be normally quite rare due to the combination of factors such as the inaccessibility of most nests by foot thus cutting off all but the most nimble mammalian carnivores and the bold defenses of the parent eagles 2 Verreaux s eagle have reportedly dropped sticks on potential nest predators This has been considered a form of tool use which is generally unknown in other raptorial birds and has been mostly reported in corvids and herons 95 Egg laying may occur from November to August in Sudan and Arabia October to May in Ethiopia and Somalia year around in East Africa with a peak of June to December and anywhere from April to November in Africa from Zambia southwards 15 In an unusual behaviour for eagles the males may bring food to females before egg laying and more typically males bring almost all food during the incubation stage 2 Two eggs are generally laid though a range of one to three is known The eggs are rather elongated ovals and being chalky white sometimes with a bluish tinge or a few reddish brown marking measuring from 71 to 83 4 mm 2 80 to 3 28 in in length and 56 62 mm 2 2 2 4 in in width with an average of 76 9 mm 58 6 mm 3 03 in 2 31 in 9 The eggs are laid at three day intervals starting in the middle of the day Both sexes incubate but the female takes the major share and tends to sit all night over them Sometimes the male may sit for 40 50 of the day with more shifts for him towards the end of incubation These are close sitters which are not easily disturbed off the nest 9 Incubation is 43 to 47 days Hatching happens at about to 2 3 days apart with about 24 hours from the first chipping of the egg s surface to complete hatching One egg is sometimes infertile and the second egg tends to be about 10 smaller 9 The Verreaux s eagle is considered an obligate cainist that is the older sibling normally kills the younger one in more than 90 of observed nests by either starvation or direct attack Aggression may continue for up to 70 days after hatching 2 96 At one time no cases of two young successfully reaching the fledging stage were known however a couple of cases of two healthy fledglings from a nest have been recorded 9 Siblicide is regularly observed in raptorial birds including unrelated families like owls and skuas and is common even typical in Aquila eagles The behaviour is most commonly explained as a kind of insurance policy with the second nestling existing both to act as a backup if the first egg or nestling perishes and to mitigate the stressful workload demanded of the parent raptors in feeding brooding and defending the young 96 The odds of survival for the second fledging are better in the golden eagle and other temperate breeding Aquila eagles possibly due to a shorter nesting stage in these species 96 In roughly 20 of golden eagle nests and in some cases such as prey rich areas of North America about half of the nests will successfully produce two fledglings 3 In the Verreaux s eagle no food is given to the hatchling in the first 36 hours thereafter they are regularly fed 2 Early in the fledging stage the young is brooded up to 90 of the time After 20 days parents spend up to 20 of time with their eaglet around the nest not brooding in daylight after 21 days Feathers appear through the down at about 34 days by 60 days feathers cover the down 9 In Equatorial Africa the eaglet fledges from the nest at 95 99 days though sometimes as little as 90 days further south In the golden eagle the fledging stage is roughly 35 days shorter 24 The young Verreaux s eagle takes its first flight and then returns to the nest for the first fortnight 9 In the early fledging period the male brings more food later it is largely the female At some point during the post fledging stage she ceases to roost with the young one and sits with the male at some distance a behaviour that seems to vary from nest to nest in timing After 45 50 days food is caught by the parents but is likely eaten by themselves and not brought to the young After leaving the nest family parties may be together for up to 6 months The eaglet grows stronger after the first month and accompanies the parents on hunting forays away from the nest It often breeds every year occasionally only on every other year 9 Population and status edit nbsp A Verreaux s eagle at Giant s Castle Verreaux s eagles nests are estimated to have a 40 50 success rate per year 9 Success of nesting is significantly higher when hyrax are common 0 56 young per year dropped to 0 28 young per year In fact in poor food areas no breeding attempt commonly occurred 66 did not attempt to breed whereas 24 did not attempt to breed in better food areas Frequency of breeding attempts is lower in wetter years Near 90 attempted nesting in years with 300 mm 12 in of rainfall whereas 45 attempted during years with roughly 1 000 mm 39 in rainfall 90 In the Matobo Hills persistent intrusion by an unmated adult into a pair s nesting territory seemed to have an adverse effect on nesting success 97 The estimated average lifespan is 16 years 9 Verreaux s eagle has a total population estimated very roughly to be somewhere in the tens of thousands in total In northeastern South Africa the local breeding population is estimated to include 240 pairs while the western Cape region of the country may hold possibly more than 2 000 pairs 35 87 Verreaux s eagle lives in kopje habitat which is generally non vulnerable to human destruction unlike say the savanna inhabited by martial eagles or the forests inhabited by crowned eagles 15 Unlike the other two big African eagles they do not often partake of much carrion so are at little risk of poisoning from carcass left out to control jackals 15 Nonetheless some people shoot at or otherwise persecute them when given the opportunity due to the largely mistaken belief that they are a threat to small livestock 69 Perhaps the greatest concern for the species is when rock hyraxes are locally hunted by humans for food and skins leading to likely declines and requiring the eagles to either switch to other prey or have their nesting attempts fail In Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in South Africa despite an appreciable decline in rock hyrax populations breeding data revealed few changes in the incubation period nestling period and post fledging dispersal period in two known pairs of the eagles 63 At this same site despite it being one of the most popular nature areas in metropolitan Johannesburg high levels of human activity have had no apparent adverse effect on the eagles breeding behaviour by contrast when exposed to similar levels of disturbance golden eagles have been shown to temporarily abandon their nests 3 98 However in South Africa the overall number of pairs declined from 78 in 1980 25 in reserves to 27 in 1988 with 19 in preserves 15 In the Sisulu Botanical Garden artificial feeding has been contemplated to maintain a breeding pair in the face of continuing declines of available wild prey 98 References edit BirdLife International 2016 Aquila verreauxii IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22696067A95221980 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22696067A95221980 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gargett Valerie 1990 The Black Eagle A Study South Africa Acorn Books and Russel Friedman Books pp 19 30 31 ISBN 0 620 11915 2 a b c d e f g h i j Watson Jeff 2010 The Golden Eagle A amp C Black ISBN 978 1 4081 1420 9 Lesson R P 1830 Centurie zoologique ou Choix d animaux rares nouveaux ou imparfaitement connus par R P Lesson Chez F G Levrault Paris pp 104 106 Kemp A C 1994 IN del Hoyo Elliott amp Sargatal eds 1994 Handbook of the Birds of the World vol 2 ISBN 84 87334 15 6 Gargett p 30 Mearns Barbara amp Mearns Richard 1988 Biographies for Birdwatchers The lives of those commemorated in Western Palaearctic bird names Academic Press London ISBN 0 12 487422 3 a b c d Lerner H Christidis L Gamauf A Griffiths C Haring E Huddleston C J Kabra S Kocum A Krosby M Kvaloy K Mindell D Rasmussen P Rov N Wadleigh R Wink M Gjershaug J O 2017 Phylogeny and new taxonomy of the Booted Eagles Accipitriformes Aquilinae Zootaxa 4216 4 301 320 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4216 4 1 hdl 11250 2443953 PMID 28183111 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 Eagles Hawks and Falcons of the World by Leslie Brown amp Dean Amadon The Wellfleet Press 1986 ISBN 978 1555214722 a b c d Helbig A J Kocum A Seibold I amp Braun M J 2005 A multi gene phylogeny of aquiline eagles Aves Accipitriformes reveals extensive paraphyly at the genus level PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution Elseveir 35 1 147 164 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2004 10 003 PMID 15737588 Archived from the original PDF on August 13 2012 Retrieved 23 April 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Lerner H R amp Mindell D P 2005 Phylogeny of eagles Old World vultures and other Accipitridae based on nuclear and mitochondrial DNA PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution Elseveir 37 2 327 346 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 04 010 PMID 15925523 Retrieved 22 April 2013 Lophaetus pomarinus The Peregrine Fund Retrieved 22 April 2013 Aquila morphnoides The Peregrine Fund Retrieved 22 April 2013 Aquila wahlbergi The Peregrine Fund Retrieved 22 April 2013 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 Raptors of the World by Ferguson Lees Christie Franklin Mead amp Burton Houghton Mifflin 2001 ISBN 0 618 12762 3 a b CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses 2nd Edition by John B Dunning Jr Editor CRC Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 4200 6444 5 Brown L H Gargett V amp Steyn P 1977 Breeding success in some African eagles related to theories about sibling aggression and its effects Ostrich 48 3 4 65 71 Mendelsohn J M Kemp A C Biggs H C Biggs R amp Brown C J 1989 Wing areas wing loadings and wing spans of 66 species of African raptors Ostrich 60 1 35 42 Biggs H C Kemp A C Mendelsohn H P amp Mendelsohn J M 1979 Weights of South African Raptors and Owls Durban Museum Novitates 12 73 81 Brough T 1983 Average weights of birds Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food Agricultural Science Service Aviation Bird Unit Worplesdon Laboratory a b Parry S J 2001 The booted eagles Aves Accipitridae perspectives in evolutionary biology University of London University College London United Kingdom Introduction Black Eagle Project Retrieved 2016 08 19 Home Wonderboom Urban Verreaux s Eagle Wonderbloom Urban Verreaux s Eagle Monitoring Project 2012 Retrieved 12 August 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Brown L 1976 Eagles of the World David and Charles ISBN 0360003184 Aquila verreauxii The Peregrine Fund Retrieved 12 August 2013 W W Bowen 1926 Catalogue of Sudan Birds Khartoum Sudan Government Museum of Natural History Nikolaus G 1987 Distribution atlas of Sudan s birds with notes on habitat and status Zoologisches Forschungsinstitut und Museum Alexander Koenig Bonn ISBN 3925382259 Smith K D 1957 An annotated check list of the birds of Eritrea Ibis 99 2 307 337 Birds of Somalia by John Miskell and John Ash 1998 Hardcover John Ash ISBN 1 873403 58 5 Ash J amp Atkins J 2009 Birds of Ethiopia and Eritrea Published by Christopher Helm London The Bird Atlas of Uganda NHBS Margaret Carswell Derek Pomeroy and Jake Reynolds British Ornithologists Club 2005 a b Dowsett Lemaire F amp Dowsett R J The Birds of Malawi An Atlas and Handbook 2006 Tauraco Press and Aves Liege Belgium 556 pages Irwin M P S 1981 The birds of Zimbabwe Quest Publishing Salisbury Zimbabwe Monadjem A and M W Rasmussen 2008 Nest distribution and conservation status of eagles selected hawks and owls in Swaziland Gabar 18 1 22 a b Tarboton W R amp Allan D G 1984 The Status and conservation of Birds of Prey in the Transvaal Pretoria Transvaal Museum Monograph No 3 Jenkins A R and A J van Zyl 2005 Conservation status and community structure of cliff nesting raptors and ravens on the Cape Peninsula South Africa Ostrich 76 175 184 Hockey P A R Dean W R J Ryan P G eds 2003 Verreaux s Eagle Black Eagle Aquila verreauxii Roberts Birds of Southern Africa VIIth Ed Cape Town The John Voelcker Bird Book Fund pp 531 532 ISBN 0620340517 Oatley T B Oschadleus H D Navarro R A and Underhill L G 1998 Review of ring recoveries of birds of prey in southern Africa 1948 1998 Johannesburg Endangered Wildlife Trust Pinto A A 1983 Ornithologia de Angola Instituto de Investigacao Cientifica Tropical Lisbon Borrow N amp Demey R 2001 Birds of western Africa Christopher Helm London Newby J Grettenberger J amp Watkins J 1987 The birds of the northern Air Niger Malimbus 9 1 Steinheimer F D and S Sammler 2007 First record of Verreaux s Eagle Aquila verreauxii in Cameroon Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 127 167 168 Ramadan Jaradi G T Bara and M Ramadan Jaradi 2008 Revised checklist of the birds of Lebanon 1999 2007 Sandgrouse 30 22 69 Ramadan Jaradi G S P Waterbury and M Ramadan Jaradi 2005 Ornithological observations from Lebanon during 2003 4 Sandgrouse 27 69 73 Shirihai H 1996 The Birds of Israel Academic Press London Eriksen H and Eriksen J Birdlife in Oman Al Roya Publishing Muscat Oman 1999 Jennings M C al Salama M I Felemban H M 1988 Report on an ornithological survey of the Asir National Park Saudi Arabia 29 June to 18 July 1987 National Commission for Wildlife Conservation and Development Riyadh Porter R F Christensen S and Schiermacker Hansen P 1996 Poyser London UK Meinertzhagen 1954 Birds of Arabia Edinburgh Oliver amp Boyd a b c d e f Steyn P 1982 Birds of Prey of Southern Africa David Philip Cape Town a b Chiweshe N 2007 Black Eagles and hyraxes the two flagship species in the conservation of wildlife in the Matobo Hills Zimbabwe Ostrich 78 381 386 Hoeck H N 1982 Population dynamics dispersal and genetic isolation in two species of Hyrax Heterohyrax brucei and Procavia johnstoni on habitat islands in the Serengeti Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie 59 177 210 a b Rowe E G 1947 The breeding biology of Aquila verreauxi Lesson Ibis 89 387 410 576 606 Jenkins A 1984 Hunting behaviour and success of in a pair of Black Eagles Ostrich 55 102 103 Parker V 2005 The atlas of the birds of central Mozambique Endangered Wildlife Trust and the Avian Demography Unit Penry H 1994 Bird Atlas of Botswana NHBS University of Natal Press 319 pages a b Maclean 1993 p 113 Barry R E and L M Barry 1996 Species composition and age structure of remains of hyraxes Hyracoidea Procaviidae at nests of black eagles Journal of Mammalogy 77 702 707 Barry R amp Mundy P 1998 Population dynamics of two species of hyraxes in the Matobo National Park Zimbabwe African Journal of Ecology 36 3 221 233 a b c Munir Virani The Verreaux s Eagle An Interview with Dr Rob Davies African Raptors Retrieved 12 August 2013 Parry Jones J 1997 Eagles amp Birds of Prey Eyewitness Books Dorling Kindersley Limited New York City ISBN 978 0 7894 6618 1 Ellis D H Tsengeg P Whitlock P amp Ellis M H 2000 Predators as prey at a Golden Eagle Aquila chrysaetos eyrie in Mongolia Ibis 142 139 141 a b c Kruger T L 2010 Long term prospects for the persistence of breeding Verreaux s Eagles Aquila verreauxii at the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden Johannesburg Doctoral dissertation a b Thompson L J Clemence L Clemence B amp Goosen D 2018 Nestling White backed Vulture Gyps africanus eaten by a Verreaux s Eagle Aquila verreauxii at a nest occupied for a record 21 years Vulture News 74 1 24 30 Mortimer J 2009 Verreaux s Eagle preying on Grey Heron Gabar 20 39 a b Boshoff A F Palmer N G Avery G Davies R A G amp Jarvis M J F 1991 Biogeographical and topographical variation in the prey of the black eagle in the Cape Province South Africa Ostrich 62 1 2 59 72 Armstrong A amp Avery G 2014 Taphonomy of Verreaux s Eagle Aquila verreauxii prey accumulations from the Cape Floral Region South Africa implications for archaeological interpretations Journal of Archaeological Science 52 163 183 Zinner D amp Pelaez F 1999 Verreaux s eagles Aquila verreauxi as potential predators of hamadryas baboons Papio hamadryas hamadryas in Eritrea American journal of primatology 47 1 61 66 a b Davies R A G 1999 The extent cost and control of livestock predation by eagles with a case study on black eagles Aquila verreauxii in Karoo Journal of Raptor Research 33 67 72 Padayachee K Malan G Lubcker N Woodborne S amp Hall G 2021 Differences in the dietary habits of Verreaux s Eagles Aquila verreauxii between peri urban and rural populations Bird Conservation International 31 1 96 110 McPherson S C Sumasgutner P amp Downs C T 2021 South African raptors in urban landscapes a review Ostrich 92 1 41 57 Steyn P 1983 Birds of prey of southern Africa Their identification and life histories Croom Helm Beckenham UK 1983 Henwood R R and W W Howells 1990 Mountain Reedbuck lamb as Black Eagle prey Lammergeyer 41 48 Skinner J D amp Chimimba C T 2005 The mammals of the southern African sub region Cambridge University Press Mundy P J Robertson A S Komen J and O Connell T J 1986 Attacks by Black Eagles on vultures Raptor Research 20 61 64 Thomsett S and Aldred J 2015 Attempted Verreaux s Eagle predation on Ruppell s Vulture and breeding observations at Lake Kwenia colony Kenya Vulture News 68 59 63 Clouet M 1981 L Aigle Royal Aquila chrysaetos dans les Pyrenees Francaises Resultats de 5 ans d observations L Oiseau et R F O 51 89 100 Estes R 1991 The Behavior Guide to African Mammals Berkeley The University of California Press Olds N J Shoshani 1982 Mammalian Species Procavia capensis American Society of Mammalogists 171 1 7 Sillero Zubiri C amp Gottelli D 1995 Diet and feeding behavior of Ethiopian wolves Canis simensis Journal of Mammalogy 531 541 Malan G M amp Padayachee K P 2020 Interspecific competition for cliff ledges on the Magaliesberg between nesting Verreaux s Eagles and roosting Chacma baboons African Zoology 55 4 368 371 Thompson L J Hickman C J Davies J P Fern F amp Downs C T 2019 A review of the use of birds nests by Egyptian geese including a breeding attempt in a hooded vulture nest African Zoology 54 3 169 173 The Breeding Cycle Black Eagle Project Retrieved 12 August 2013 Norton P M and S R Henley 1985 Black Eagles attacking leopards Bokmakierie 37 114 115 Allan D G 1988 Breeding success nest spacing and territory size of Black Eagles in the Magaliesberg South Africa Gabar 3 76 81 Clouet M Barrau C amp Goar J L 2000 The diurnal Afro alpine raptor community of the Ethiopian Bale Highlands Ostrich 71 380 384 a b Davies R A G 1994 Black Eagle Aquila verreauxii predation on rock hyrax Procavia capensis and other prey in the Karoo PhD thesis University of Pretoria Newton I 1979 Population Ecology of Raptors Poyser Berkhamsted Davies R A G amp Ferguson J W H 2000 The influence of predation by Black Eagles Aquila verreauxii on Rock Hyrax numbers in the arid Karoo In Chancellor RD amp Meyburg B U Eds Raptors at risk WWGBP Hancock House UK a b Gargett V Gargett E amp Damania D 1995 The influence of rainfall on Black Eagle breeding over 31 years in the Matobo Hills Zimbabwe Ostrich 66 114 121 Bildstein K L 2006 Book Migrating raptors of the world their ecology and conservation Cornell University Press Ithaca NY Hartley R 1998 Raptor migration and conservation in Zimbabwe Torgos 28 135 150 Kemp 2001 p 78 Griesel R 2004 Verreaux s Eagle nest sites in the southern Free State Gabar 15 20 22 Dick J A amp Fenton M B 1979 Tool using by a black eagle a b c Simmons R 1988 Offspring quality and the evolution of cainism Ibis 130 339 357 Gargett V 1977 A 13 year population study of the Black Eagles in the Matopos Rhodesia 1964 1976 Ostrich 48 17 27 a b Simmons R Rodrigues L Woodcock L Steyn P amp Jenkins A 2007 City Limits Can the Verreaux s Eagle survive urbanisation Birds and Birding pp 43 45 Gordon Lindsay Maclean 1993 Robert s Birds of Southern Africa Sixth Edition John Voelcker Bird Book Fund p 112 113 Alan and Meg Kemp 2001 Birds of Prey of Africa and its Islands SASOL p 78 Wonderboom Urban Verreaux s Eagle Project http www blackeagleswb comExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Verreaux s eagle at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Verreaux s eagle at Wikispecies Verreaux s eagle Black eagle Aquila verreauxii Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Verreaux 27s eagle amp oldid 1207585653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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