When we think of birds of prey,
we often seize on images of giant predators wheeling in the sky like
fighter aircraft searching for targets. But the American Kestrel is in
fact not much larger than an American Robin.
Don't be fooled by the size. This raptor is armed with strong
taloned feet and a powerful hooked bill. A tooth-like projection on the
upper part of the beak allows the kestrel to tear apart small birds,
mammals, amphibians and reptiles. Insects are also consumed and when
plentiful, grasshoppers constitue the staple food on the kestrel.
This small predator hunts over open country and often hovers above one
spot. It can be seen in fields, meandows, prairies, burntlands, woodland
openings and cities. The kestrel often perches on dead-topped trees, fence
posts, poles and buildings and when it perches it flicks its tail
repeatedly.
Kestrels are not fastidious about their accommodation. Mating begins in
spring but little attempt is made to build any nest. Instead the American
Kestrel will make use of a handy woodpecker hole, natural cavity, or any
recess in a building or bank burrow. Four or five eggs are incubated by
the female in a month. The male feeds the female during this period, then
both parents share the task of feeding the fledglings until they are old
enough to fly.
Transport Canada
Patuxent Wildlife Research Center
Birds of Santa Barbara Backcountry
Texas Parks and Wildlife
Birds of British Columbia
Rickert's Garden page
Henson Robinson Zoo Homepage
Falcons, Hawks, and Eagles of North Dakota
Raptor Rehabilitation of Kentucky
Birds of Prey
University of Michigan
Birds of Nova Scotia
Audubon Center for Birds of Prey
birding.com
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Kick N' Back
Birds of the World on Postage Stamps
Illinois Raptor Center
Georgia Wildlife
Florida Wildlife magazine
Oiseaux de mon Patelin
Société Radio-Canada