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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: JUN-KHA |
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KESTREL (Fr. Cresserelle or Crecerelle, O. Fr. Quercerelle and Quercelle, in Burgundy Cristel) , the English name' for one of the smaller falcons. This bird, though in the form of its bill and ' Other English names are windhover and standgale (the last often corrupted into stonegale and stannell). KESTREL length of its wings one of the true falcons, and by many ornithologists placed among them under its Linnaean name of Falco tinnunculus, is by others referred to a distinct genus Tinnunculus as T. alaudariusthe last being an epithet wholly inappropriate. We have here a case in which the propriety of the custom which requires the establishment
The ordinary kestrel of Europe, Falco tinnunculus or Tinnunculus alaudarius, is by far the commonest bird of prey in the British Islands. It is almost entirely a summer migrant, coming from the south in early spring and departing in autumn, though examples (which are nearly always found to be birds of the year) occasionally occur in winter, some arriving on the eastern coast in autumn. It is most often observed while hanging in the air for a minute or two in the same spot, by means of short and rapid beats of its wings, as, with head pointing to windward and expanded tail, it is looking out for preywhich consists chiefly of mice, but it will at times take a small bird, and the remains of frogs, insects and even earthworms have been found in its crop. It generally breeds in the deserted nest of a crow or pie, but frequently in rocks, ruins, or even in hollow treeslaying four or five eggs, mottled all over with dark brownish-red, sometimes tinged with orange and at other times with purple. Though it may occasionally snatch up a young partridge or pheasant
Three other species are found in AfricaT. rupicola, T. rupicoloides and T. alopexthe first a common bird in the Cape, while the others occur in the interior. Some of the islands of the Ethiopian region have peculiar species of kestrel, as the T. newtoni of Madagascar, T. punctatus of Mauritius and T. gracilis of the Seychelles; while, on the opposite side, the kestrel of the Cape Verde Islands has been separated as T. neglectus. The T. sparverius, commonly known in Canada and the United States as the " sparrow -hawk," is a beautiful little bird. Various attempts have been made to recognize several species, more or less in accordance with locality, but the majority of ornithologists seem unable to accept the distinctions which have been elaborated chiefly by Bowdler Sharpe in his Catalogue and R. Ridgway (North American Birds, iii. 159175), the former of whom recognizes six species, while the latter admits but threeT. sparverius, T. leucophrys and T. sparverioideswith five geographical races of the first, viz. the typical T. sparverius from the continent of North America except the coast of the Gulf of Mexico
sparrow -hawk," " quail-hawk " and " bush
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