Adulto (borealis) © Jonathan Eckerson eBird S34465532 Macaulay Library ML 48674511
Adulto (borealis) © Brian Sullivan
Morfo claro adulto (calurus/alascensis) © Jerry Liguori
Morfo claro adulto (calurus/alascensis) © Jerry Liguori
Morfo escuro adulto (calurus/alascensis) © Jerry Liguori
+ 19
Morfo escuro adulto (calurus/alascensis) © Brian Sullivan
Morfo claro adulto (abieticola) © Brian Sullivan
Morfo escuro adulto (Harlan's) © Jerry Liguori
Morfo claro adulto (Harlan's) © Harold Ziolkowski
Morfo escuro adulto (Harlan's) © Brian Sullivan
Adulto (Krider's) © Brian Sullivan
Adulto (Krider's) © Brian Sullivan
Adulto (costaricensis) © Andrew Spencer
Morfo claro juvenil (calurus/alascensis) © Alex Lamoreaux
Morfo escuro juvenil (calurus/alascensis) © Brian Sullivan
Morfo escuro juvenil (Harlan's) © Brian Sullivan
Juvenil (Krider's) © Elizabeth Winter
Adulto (borealis) © Alex Lamoreaux
Juvenil (borealis) © Jonathan Eckerson
Juvenil (Krider's) © Tim Ray
Morfo escuro adulto (calurus/alascensis) © Steve Valasek
Adulto (borealis) © Ram Subramanian
Habitat © Adam Dudley

red-tailed hawk Buteo jamaicensis

Faça login para ver seus badges

Identificação

FORNECIDA POR MERLIN

Most common roadside raptor across much of North America. Often perches atop telephone poles, light posts, and edges of trees. Incredible variation in plumages, including less common dark morphs and various regional differences. Eastern adults have brilliant reddish-orange tail and pale underparts with obvious band of dark marks across belly. Western birds are typically darker. Immatures do not have a red tail.

FORNECIDA POR MERLIN