Crane hawk
The crane hawk is a species of bird of prey in the family Accipitridae. It is the only species placed in the genus Geranospiza.
Taxonomy
The crane hawk used to be many species that were recently lumped into one. Those species are now designated as subspecies. Color varies clinally, though, and it is now commonly accepted that they comprise one species. There are also two species of harrier-hawks in Africa of the genus Polyboroides that, while they are morphologically and behaviorally similar, are not very closely related. They serve as a good example of convergent evolution.Six subspecies are recognised:
- G. c. livens Bangs & Penard, TE, 1921 – northwest Mexico
- G. c. nigra – Mexico to central Panama
- G. c. balzarensis Sclater, WL, 1918 – east Panama to northwest Peru
- G. c. caerulescens – east Colombia to the Guianas to east Peru and Amazonian Brazil
- G. c. gracilis – northeast Brazil
- G. c. flexipes Peters, JL, 1935 – south Brazil to Paraguay, Bolivia, north Argentina and Uruguay
Habitat and distribution
Behavior
These hawks often forage by scanning from a perch or on the wing and swooping down to grab prey. However, they are notable for having "double-jointed" tarsal bones, allowing them to reach into tree cavities and extract prey, a trait they share with the genus of African harrier-hawks Polyboroides. Their main prey are small vertebrates, especially rodents, bats, lizards, snakes, frogs and small birds, but they have also been known to eat larger insects, spiders, other arthropods and snails.During breeding, nests are built in tree canopies, often in clumps of orchids or other epiphytes. The nest is a shallow cup of twigs, anywhere from 10–25 metres up in a tree. Clutches are usually 1-2 white-or-bluish-tinged eggs.