Breeding Location:
Forests, dense old growth, Forests, dense at high elevations
Breeding Type:
Monogamous
Breeding Population:
Common in range
Egg Color:
White speckled with brown
Number of Eggs:
2
Incubation Days:
21 - 27
Egg Incubator:
Female
Nest Material:
Sticks
Migration:
Migratory
Recommended Products:
Overview
Roadside Hawk: This small, long legged tropical species common from Mexico to Argentina is casual in winter to the Rio Grande Valley. Gray-brown upperparts and rufous belly with white to buff coarse bars. Tail is banded with white tip. Flies with stiff, rapid wingbeats and hunts along roadsides.
Range and Habitat
Roadside Hawk: Tropical species, casual in winter in the lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas. Prefers plantations, second-growth woods and field edges. Often perches low on roadside fence posts or trees.
Breeding and Nesting
Roadside Hawk: Two white eggs speckled with brown are laid in a nest built by both sexes of sticks, in trees 20-60 feet above ground. Incubations is 21-27 days primarily by the female.
Foraging and Feeding
Roadside Hawk: Eats large insects, reptiles and small mammals which it finds on roadsides and field edges.
Readily Eats
Vocalization
Roadside Hawk: Song is a nagging scream, "KREE-yurrr" or "meeahhh."
Similar Species
Roadside Hawk: Broad-winged Hawk has a shorter dark tail with wide white bands. Red-shouldered Hawk juvenile is larger and shows a narrow pale panel across base of outer primaries in flight.
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