Rifle

Rifle was hatched at the World Bird Sanctuary, and was raised by our staff to help educate the public about the many problems faced by wildlife in the modern world. She quickly learned to fly from one trainer to another and soon became a featured performer. Rifle spent the summers of 1988-1990 at the Louisville Zoo Bird of Prey show. Since that time she has been thrilling audiences far and wide with her low swooping performances. Every fall she is a featured performer at the Kansas City Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs, Kansas. She has even taken part in a wedding, acting as the ring-bearer by flying the rings into the wedding ceremony of one of our staff members. For many years we referred to Rifle as “he”; however that all changed when she laid an egg! With most birds of prey there are very few, if any, outward differences between the sexes. Short of doing a surgical procedure, the only guideline to determining sex is based on differences in weight and size. Sometimes we are proven wrong when a bird lays an egg.

 


Adoption Fee 100.00
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Harris Hawk

Parabuteo unicinctus


Description relatively small heavy-set raptor; generally blackish or sooty brown with shoulders, thighs, and underwing coverts a chestnut color; upper and undertail coverts, as well as a one-inch band at the tip of the tail are white; eyes are dark brown; eyelids, cere, and legs are yellow; immature birds vaguely streaked with white on breast and abdomen and thighs are barred with white; their upper parts are more or less edged with a rufous color, and outer tail feathers are barred
Sex both sexes identical in coloration and markings; males smaller than females
Age 10-15 years
Length 17.5-29"
Wingspan 3.5-4'
Weight 1-2 lbs.
Habitat sparse woodlands or semi-desert regions
Status endangered in New Mexico, Arizona and Southern California due to human encroachment and habitat destruction
Range lowland areas from the southwestern border of the U.S., south to southern Chile, central Argentina, and Paraguay; found east into Venezuela and the interior of Brazil, and south to Santa Catharina
Behavior 2-4 white eggs, sparsely spotted with brown or lavender, are laid in a nest, usually less than 30 feet above the ground; incubation is about 28 days; young leave the nest at about 3-1/2 weeks of age; will stay close to the nest for another 3-4 months
Diet small mammals, such as rats and rabbits, as well as birds, reptiles and even insects
Vocalization generally silent, but will utter a long harsh scream when the nest is approached
Other Information - Very family oriented, often hunting in groups; young from the previous year help the parents raise the next clutch - Known for a behavior called "stacking", one bird will perch on the top of a cactus, and as other family members approach, they will ball up their feet and land on the shoulders of the perched bird; as many as 4 birds will stand on each other's backs