THE BIRDS
WESTERN GOSHAWK. Astur atricapillus striatulus Ridgway
Field characters.Size of
Red-tailed Hawk, but of more slender build, with shorter, more rounded
wings, and longer, more slender tail (pl. 44b); patch at either
side of rump, as seen in flight, white. Upper surface uniform dark slate
gray in adults; dark brown in immature birds; under surface white,
finely barred with black in adults, and broadly streaked with dark brown
in immatures. Voice: A series of loud, insistent, staccato cries,
kak, kak, kak, with a ringing quality, sometimes varied to
kee-är.
Occurrence.Resident in
small numbers in Canadian Zone on west slope of Sierra Nevada. Visits
Yosemite Valley in winter. Lives in or about thick forests.
The Western Goshawk is the largest of the three
bullet hawks, which make birds their principal victims. Its large size
enables it to prey upon all manner of game; hence, even though present
in but small numbers, it must play an important part in limiting the
population of quail, grouse, and pigeons in the higher mountainous
districts. It is known to visit mountain ranches in fall and winter and
to capture domestic chickens. Quite likely at times rabbits and the
larger squirrels also fall victims to it.
During the many weeks which we spent in the Canadian
Zone we saw goshawks but four times, and only on one occasion was more
than a single individual seen; therefore the species is not to be
considered at all common in the Yosemite region. On October 3, 1915, an
adult goshawk circled about the head of Glen Aulin, and then made off
rapidly down-cañon through the lodgepole pine forest. Its rapid
flight through the trees suggested strongly its relationship to the
smaller Sharp-shinned and Cooper hawks. Another adult was seen to good
advantage in the cañon of Florence Creek on August 26.
Near Ostrander Rocks, on June 23, 1915, a pair of
adult goshawks was routed out of a growth of dense red firs in a
cañon. They showed much solicitude over the observer's presence,
and kept flying about over head, frequently alighting on the uppermost
tips of the fir trees and uttering their shrill ringing cries in rapid
series of from twelve to thirty-six notes. At this time all of the
distinctive field characters enumerated above could be seen to
advantage, and when one flew close by, the fine barring on the feathers
of the lower surface was easily observed. Search of trees in the
vicinity led to the discovery of a nest about sixty feet up in a red
fir, supported by the lowermost smaller branches which started from the
trunk at that height. The ground below the nest, as in the case of the
nest of the Cooper Hawk cited above, was covered with white excrement,
suggesting recent or present occupation by young birds.
In Yosemite Valley, on November 1, 1915, Mrs. Jack
Gaylor shot an immature female goshawk just as the bird swooped down
into her chicken yard. Its crop and gullet were empty. It was reported
that five goshawks were killed in the Valley in the fall of 1917. Mr.
Donald D. McLean reports that this hawk is occasionally seen in winter
in the vicinity of Smith Creek east of Coulterville, altitude about 3000
feet.
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