FALCONS, HAWKS, EAGLES, ETC. 



159 



342. Buteo swainsoni Bonap. SWAINSON HAWK. 



Adult mult- in normal //,'t///i<i</i< : throat and belly white, ichite of throat 



sharply contrasted u-ith 



JTroin Biological Survey, U. S. 

 Dept. of Agriculture. 



Fig. '230. 



brotni clitst band; upper parts nearly uni- 

 form dark grayish brown ; tail crossed by 

 about or 1C narrow blackish bands. Adult 

 ti/iiii/f in normal plumage: like male, but 

 chest patch grayish brown instead of rufous. 

 Melanistic phase, both sexes: whole plumage 

 uniform sooty brown, under tail coverts some- 

 times spotted or barred with rusty or whitish. 

 Every possible gradation is shown by different 

 individuals between this black phase and the 

 light colored normal plumage. Young : upper 

 parts blackish brown varied with buff y or yel- 

 lowish brown ; head. neck, and under parts 

 buffy brown, head and neck streaked with 

 blackish ; under parts usually more or less 

 blotched with blackish. Male: length 10.50- 

 20.00. extent 48.00-50.50. wing- 14.40-16.00, 

 tail 8-0, bill .SO-.90. Female : length 21-22, 

 extent 50.50-56.00, wins? 14.75-17.25, tail 0-10, 

 bill .80-.05. 



Distribution. - - From the arctic regions 

 south to Argentina ; in the United States 

 from the Pacific to Wisconsin, Illinois, and 



Arkansas ; casually to Massachusetts. Migratory north of South Dakota 

 and Nebraska. 



Nest. In cottonwoods and other trees, and also in bushes and on rocks, 

 made of sagebrush, willow, or other sticks, lined largely with green leaves 

 and bark. Eggs : I to 4. greenish white, fading to yellowish, spotted in- 

 conspicuously with different shades of brown. 



Food. Almost entirely small rodents, principally striped gophers and 

 mice, together with grasshoppers and crickets. 



" On the arid wastes and tablelands of southern Arizona, as well 

 as in the sage and bunch grass districts of Nevada, Oregon, Washing- 

 ton, and Idaho, Swainson's hawk is especially abundant, outnumber- 

 ing, perhaps, all the other Raptores of these regions combined. It is 

 eminently a prairie bird, shunning the densely timbered mountain 

 regions, and being more at home in the sparing!}' wooded localities 

 usually found along the watercourses of the lowlands. 



Compared with the majority of our hawks it is gentle and un- 

 suspicious in disposition, living in perfect harmony with its smaller 

 neighbors. It is no unusual sight to find other birds, . . . nesting 

 in the same tree ; and the Arkansas kingbird goes even farther than 

 this, sometimes constructing its home . . . under the nest of these 

 hawks or in the sides of it. . . . 



"The food of Swainson's hawk consists almost entirely of the 

 smaller rodents, principally striped gophers and mice, as well as grass- 

 hoppers and the large black cricket, which is very common as well as 

 destructive in certain seasons, and the bane of the farmers in eastern 



