Eastern red-tailed hawk


The eastern red-tailed hawk is a subspecies of the red-tailed hawk that breeds from southeast Canada and Maine south through Texas and east to northern Florida.

Range

The race breeds below the Arctic, and is absent from all but the southernmost part of the Hudson Bay and roughly the northern third of both Quebec and Newfoundland. Wintering migrants from southern Ontario may range east to southern Maine and south to as far as the Gulf Coast and Florida. The western limits of this race's range are slightly ambiguous and they may hybridize extensively with the western red-tailed hawk in timbered stretches of the Great Plains. The breeding range of B. j. borealis seems to include most of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska. In the Dakotas and even eastern Wyoming, some B. j. borealis may occur but give way mostly to B. j. calurus and/or Krider's hawk, with the B. j. borealis type hawks breeding without race mixing to the western border of Minnesota and the eastern third of Manitoba.

Description

This is a large-bodied, relatively heavy race, but differs from more westerly hawks in having a relatively smaller wing area. Based on linear dimensions, this subspecies shows the most size variation and, unlike the red-tailed hawk species overall, size variation seems to fall within Bergmann's rule as northern birds average larger than southern ones. The wing chord of males can range from, averaging, and, in females, it ranges from, averaging. Additionally, males and females average in tail length, in tarsal length and in culmen length. The largest known sample of body weights from unambiguous B. j. borealis was from Wisconsin migrants, with 34 males averaging and 24 females averaging. This race only has pale morphs and almost always bears a whitish ground color with little barring overall, including a variably present dark necklace, a frequently absent or much reduced belly band and little to no barring on the flanks or the upper legs. Immature B. j. borealis tend to have dark spotting on leg feathers but otherwise average paler than immatures of most other races. This race includes a form from the northern stretches of its range, formerly considered as B. j. abieticola. Birds of B. j. abieticola type are more heavily marked below than typical B. j. borealis and, thus B. j. borealis seem to correspond to Gloger's rule, as well. This plumage variation appears to be a regional adaptation to the denser boreal forest.