Rufous-thighed hawk
The rufous-thighed hawk is a small hawk found from southern Brazil and southeastern Bolivia to Paraguay, Uruguay and northern Argentina. It is usually considered a subspecies of the sharp-shinned hawk by most taxonomists, including the American Ornithological Society, but the taxonomy is far from resolved, with some authorities considering the southern taxa to represent three separate species: white-breasted hawk, plain-breasted hawk, and rufous-thighed hawk.
Taxonomy
The breeding ranges of the rufous-thighed and sharp-shinned hawk is entirely allopatric. This allopatry combined with differences in plumage and, apparently, certain measurements, has been the background for the split, but hard scientific data are presently lacking.Description
This is a small Accipiter hawk, with males long, with a wingspan of and weight from. As common in Accipiter hawks, females are distinctly larger in size, averaging some 30% longer, and with a weight advantage of more than 50% being common. The female measures in length, has a wingspan of and weighs. The wings measure each, the tail is long and the tarsus is. Measurements given here are for the sharp-shinned hawk, but they are comparable for the remaining species.Adults have short broad wings and a medium-length tail banded in blackish and gray with the tip varying among individuals from slightly notched through square to slightly rounded. The remiges are whitish barred blackish. The legs are long and very slender and yellow. The hooked bill is black and the cere is yellowish.
The rufous-thighed hawk resembles the sharp-shinned hawk, but upperparts are darker, streaking to underparts rufous or dusky, cheeks are typically with a clear rufous patch and iris is yellow. Juveniles resemble juveniles of sharp-shinneds, but streaking to the underparts are typically restricted to throat and central underparts, with flanks scaled or barred.