Reproduction

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/animal/falconiform
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: Falconiformes, raptor

Many falconiforms pair for life; others, notably migrant species, may pair anew each year. Occasionally, immatures pair with adults, but usually only sexually mature individuals attempt to breed. Immatures, however, often perform typical display movements, and a pair bond may be formed between an adult and an immature, though the latter may be replaced by an adult if one should appear.

The breeding pattern follows the usual sequence of nuptial display, nest building, incubation, fledging period, and postfledging period. The length of the breeding period varies from about 3 months in the smallest species to over 15 months in condors, crowned eagles, and probably harpy eagles. No species regularly produces two broods in a season, but second broods have been recorded, even in some large species. Some nomadic species, such as the elanine kites, may breed more often in response to, for instance, high local rodent populations.

Nuptial displays are often spectacular, sometimes inconspicuous. The common forms are: calling from a perch; calling from soaring flight; undulating flight, diving, and swooping up, often with loud calling; mutual displays, in which the male dives with lowered feet at the female, who turns over and raises her claws to his; and, rarely, cartwheeling, in which the pair lock feet and descend in whirling flight—e.g., some eagles and kites. Most species perform several types of display, but species inhabiting woodland or forest display more often and more vociferously than related species of open country.

Most species build nests on trees, ledges of cliffs, or, rarely, on the ground. All members of the family Accipitridae, as well as caracaras, the osprey, and the secretary bird, construct nests, usually of sticks. The Cathartidae and the remaining Falconidae (forest falcons, falconets, and true falcons) do not make nests but use a hollow tree, another bird’s nest, or a scrape on a ledge. Constructed nests vary from small structures of twigs and vines made by cuckoo-hawks (Aviceda) to enormous, annually augmented stick-piles of many eagles. Small species usually build a new nest annually; large species tend to return to and repair an old nest. Imminent occupation is usually indicated by fresh green material, which continues to be added until late in the fledging period but does not necessarily mean that eggs will be laid. The same site, but not always the same nest or ledge, may be occupied for several years, generations, or centuries. Some large eagles use the same nest for years, others haphazardly use several alternates.

Many species lay only one egg; few lay more than four. The largest clutches are laid by small falcons and accipiters of temperate latitudes and by ground-nesting harriers. Clutches of related species are smaller in the tropics than in high latitudes. The eggs are laid at two- to four-day intervals. Falconiform eggs are rather large for the size of the birds and are usually rounded white or greenish ovals. The eggs are more or less heavily spotted, occasionally completely covered with brown or red-brown pigment. Among the family Accipitridae, the secretary bird, and the osprey, the inside of the shell is green or blue-green; in Falconidae it is buff or reddish. Incubation, usually by the female alone (the male sometimes takes a share), occupies from 28 days in small falcons to 50 days or more in large vultures. Buzzards (Buteo) incubate for 30–35 days, though some are larger than small eagles that have incubation periods of 45 days.

The eggs hatch in the order in which they were laid. By the time the last egg has hatched, the first-hatched chick may have tripled its weight and may kill its sibling, either directly or through competition for food. Newly hatched chicks are covered in down, which is later replaced by a thicker, woollier coat; at this stage parental brooding is reduced by day. Feathers erupt during the fledging period and almost cover the nestling at midpoint. At this stage most young learn to tear up their own prey.

Parental attention is steadily reduced, from continuous brooding day and night to leaving the feathered young entirely alone except for brief feeding visits. The young make their first flights unaided by parental coaxing. The adult roles are usually clear-cut. In the early fledging period, the male kills for himself, his mate, and the brood by doubling or tripling his previous killing rate. When partly feathered young can tear up their prey, the female no longer stays near the nest but hunts and thereafter brings more prey than the male. After their first flight, the young remain near the nest for several weeks or months. They are provided with food by the parents but may also learn to kill. The longest postfledging periods known are in crowned eagles and condors; in the crowned eagle the young remain dependent for 9 to 11 months, and this species normally breeds only every second year.

Especially in large species, breeding does not necessarily occur annually. The number of young reared per pair per year varies from 2.5 to 3 in small falcons and sparrowhawks of temperate climates to 0.4 or even less in some tropical eagles and vultures. Breeding success, like clutch size, tends to be lower in related species in the tropics than in temperate zones. Low breeding success may fluctuate with adverse winters, poor food supplies, or even territorial behaviour in crowded habitats.

Ecology

Feeding

Falconiforms prey on small animals or eat carrion. The palm-nut vulture (Gypohierax angolensis) of Africa is the exception; it feeds mainly on oil palm fruits.

Food supplies exert a general influence over populations, but it also seems that when food is superabundant the population does not rise proportionately. Among golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) in Scotland, the home range of a pair is about 4,400 ha (11,000 acres), irrespective of food abundance. A breeding pair of raptors apparently maintains a territory containing much more food than it can possibly utilize. In some cases such home ranges are maintained by aggressive behaviour; in others the precise method is obscure. In colonial vultures no home range is maintained, and the only defended territory is around the nest.

From a combination of factors, a reasonably accurate estimate of the minimum daily food required for a raptor can be made. The amount of kills wasted (varying from less than 5 to 20 percent by weight, according to the type of prey taken) is added to the minimum daily food demand in order to determine the amount that must be killed to maintain a pair and their young for one year. For example, if a falconiform weighs 1,200 grams (42 ounces), has a food requirement of 8 percent of bodyweight, eats 96 grams (3 ounces) a day and 36 kg (79 pounds) each year, and feeds on birds (involving waste of about 15 percent of all kills), then it must kill 41 kg (90 pounds) of prey each year to fulfill its needs.

Individuals of one species do not usually tolerate others of the same species in their home breeding range. The same area, however, may support several species that prefer different types of prey and so do not compete with one another. In a single area of varied habitat, up to 20 different species may be found (even more with migrants), exerting a much greater and more complicated, but still broadly quantifiable, pressure on populations of available prey. Closely related groups may show ecological separation. For example, some African vultures feed in groups upon the soft flesh and intestines of prey, while others tear at sinews and hide or snatch meat from other species. Smaller vultures pick up scraps or use their slender beaks to reach cavities inaccessible to birds with heavier beaks. All of these birds may feed together at the same carcass without competing for food, though individuals of each species maintain a dominance hierarchy by aggressive movements.

Migration

In the Arctic only the gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) does not regularly migrate but subsists on wintering ptarmigan. In summer several other falconiforms arrive, but so do many species of prey; in addition, lemmings multiply, further increasing food supplies. In African savannas and southern Indian rice fields, resident falconiform populations are greatly augmented in winter by migrant populations of buzzards, kites, harriers, and small falcons. This sharply increases the total predator pressure on prey populations, but it does not appear that this influx of migrants has any adverse effect on the resident populations, which may be breeding while the migrants are present. In most cases it appears that falconiforms have a slight or negligible effect on prey populations. The annual needs of resident species may vary from 1/20 to 1/1,000 or even less of available prey. In migrant winter populations, local effects may be much greater than in resident breeding populations. The availability or visibility of the prey also plays a part. Among European sparrowhawks, conspicuous or gregarious birds of open ground are more often killed than inconspicuous skulking species.