Components
North American Bird Profiles
Interactive Bird Coloring Book
Bird Anatomy
Hear Bird Songs
State Birds
Bird Integration

Backyard Birds Reading Comp.

Peregrine Falcon Reading Comp.
Baltimore Oriole Reading Comp.
Birds Cloze Reading
Birds Sentence Surgeons
Birds Interactive Scavenger Hunt
Birds Printable Scavenger Hunt
Bird Math
Birds Interactive
Birds Crossword
Birds online word search
Goldfinch Jigsaw
Birds Hangman
Bird Identification Quizzes
Easy
Intermediate
Ornithologist

Internet mrnussbaum.com
Home >> Science >> American Birds >> American Kestrel
Science Navigation >>
American Kestrel Range Map | Color Online

The American Kestrel is our smallest and most widespread falcon. Like many Pennsylvania birdwatchers, my first experiences with the American Kestrel occurred along the telephone wires lining the fields in central Pennsylvania along the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Though it was often difficult to catch a lasting glimpse of this colorful raptor at 55 miles per hour, the tell-tale posture and silhouette of the bird made it easy to identify. T

Description: Measuring about 10 inches in length, the American Kestrel has a blue-gray cap that surrounds a rufous circle, black markings about the face and neck, a rufous back with black markings, blue-gray wings with black markings, buff colored breast and underparts with black markings, and a rufous tail fringed with black and a white terminal band. Females are similar but have rufous wings. ennessee

Diet/Habitat/Range: American Kestrels are unique among hawks and falcons in that they nest in natural tree cavities or man made nest boxes. Kestrels eat a variety of insects, rodents and small birds and usually hunt from an exposed perch. Kestrels capture prey by hovering (almost tern-like) before diving onto it from above. American Kestrels range throughout North America and into South America, with highest densities occurring in the western Great Plains of Wyoming and Montana. While Kestrels are generally birds of open areas, pastures, fields, and farmlands, they are frequently found in urban areas with suitable habitat. Verm

mrnussbaum.com copyright 2005-2006 by Greg Nussbaum. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy | Advertise on this site

 

 

 
1