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| The crested caracara (Caracara cheriway) Photo taken near Geneva in Seminole County, FL in 2008 |
It's official! While driving along an access road to a wildlife conservation area in Brevard County yesterday, looking for a bald eagle that had been reported to be in the area, I observed a large, dark bird slowly circling a small stand of cabbage palms in a nearby pasture. Pausing the car to get a better look through the binoculars, I realized I was watching a caracara deliver a small twig to its nesting tree. This family has been nesting regularly in this area for a few years and has become very popular with birders and photographers, causing the road to be posted as a "no stopping zone" to prevent harassment of the birds in their nesting area. So, the photos you see here aren't the greatest, but they are good enough to see that at least one of the pair has been banded and the nesting material was successfully delivered. The birds did not seem to notice me; perhaps that's because there is a deep, wide canal with a border of low shrubs that runs along the road and tends to hide vehicles as they pass.
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| Brevard County, 10/7/10 |
In this first photo, you can see the twig being carried in the bird's bill; since that wing spread is at least 48", there was a good deal of crashing and thrashing as it maneuvered through the fronds and into the nest, which is located in the middle of the top of the tree. You can also see the bright white feathers that mark the tail and wing tips of the caracara, making it a lovely bird to watch in flight. The caracara is a member of the falcon family, and its flight is very similar to those usually much smaller birds: long, slow glides and steady but shallow wing flaps.
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| Brevard County 10/7/10 |
This second photo shows one of the adults (I have no idea if it's the same bird or if it is the mate) exiting the nest a few seconds later. Respecting the "no stopping zone" directive, I did not stay to watch any further activity. I suspect that this is the same individual that delivered the twig and that the mate was in the tree, fashioning the nest, but I've never seen caracaras actually building their nest before, so I don't know what the usual procedure is. Perhaps someone who reads this blog will comment on that for us. The leg bands on this bird are predominantly light blue.
In February of 2009, I observed a pair of caracaras who were raising a family on the Orlando Wetlands in a tree that was just a few hundred feet from one of the walking berms. (That family is still out there, having built this year's nest even closer to the parking lot and main buildings of the park, to the delight of a handful of photographers and birders who noticed!) Those birds were loud and showy in voicing their disapproval of people getting too close to their nesting area (the caracara, apparently, is a very quiet bird, and the loud crackling noise they make, accompanied by a backward head thrust, is an indication that they are feeling threatened):
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| Unbanded caracara at Orlando Wetlands Park in 2009 |
We had no idea that was a threatened display until it was explained to us, a few days later; we actually thought is was some sort of cool mating display . . . duh. Now you know, too. Please back off, if you see this behavior! (Threatened species status requires that people respect a primary protective zone of 985 feet from a nest. Please realize that if you are on this road, you are within that zone! If you get that display and you do not back off, you are harassing the birds and are in violation of federal law!) I do wonder if this protection includes the men who are clearing the canal . . . those machines are loud, obnoxious, and the canal is definitely within the primary protective zone!
I wish this Brevard County pair good luck in their attempt to raise another brood.








































