White-tailed Kite
White-tailed Kite: Small hawk with gray upperparts, black shoulders, and white face and underparts. Eyes are red, bill is black. Underwings are white and gray with dark patches at bend. Tail is square, pale gray, and shorter than folded wings. Legs and feet are gray. Soars on thermals and updrafts.
● Song:
"keep-keep-keep", "weep-weep", "plee-wit, plee-witt"
● Foraging & Feeding:
White-tailed Kite: Diet consists of voles, field mice, pocket gophers, ground squirrels, shrews, small birds, small snakes, lizards, frogs, grasshoppers, crickets, and beetles; hunts while hovering, often pausing to study the ground before swooping down on prey.
● Breeding & nesting:
White-tailed Kite: Three to six white eggs with brown blotches are laid in a loose nest made of thin twigs. Male brings most of the material, which is then worked into the nest by the female. Female incubates eggs for about 30 days, with male sometimes assisting; male feeds her on or near the nest during incubation.
● Similar species:
White-tailed Kite: Gulls and terns lack black shoulder and wrist marks and have longer bills. Mississippi Kite is much darker and lacks shoulder and wrist marks.
● Range & Habitat:
White-tailed Kite: Common in northwest Africa, southern Asia, the East Indies, Arabia, and Africa south of the Sahara. Also occurs on west coast of the U.S. and in parts of Mexico. Preferred habitats include open savannah, cultivated highlands, grassy plains, and semi-desert grasslands.