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Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus)

Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus)

Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus)



Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus) Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus) - Juvenile Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus) Crested Caracara (Caracara cheriway) Southern Caracara (Polyborus plancus ) Crested Caracara (Polyborus cheriway)
Crested Caracara (Polyborus cheriway)

Class: Aves
Family: Falconidae
Common Name: Crested Caracara
Genus: Caracara
Species Name: plancus

About The Crested Caracara

The Northern Crested Caracara (Caracara cheriway), also called the Northern Caracara, Crested Caracara or Audubon’s Caracara, is a non-migratory, diurnal, neotropical in the family .  It has a characteristic crest, strong banding on its chest, and long legs.  Common especially in arid open country in Northern South America as far south as Central Brazil and Central Peru, throughout Central America, Cuba, and much of Mexico, the Northern Crested Caracara is also resident in the United States in southern parts of Texas, Arizona and Florida (an isolated population thought to be a relic from the ice ages).

The closely related (C. plancus) and the extinct (C. lutosa) were previously lumped together with C. cheriway as a single species but the three species have since been split.  While the range of the southern South American C. plancus does overlap with that of C. cheriway, only limited interbreeding occurs. 

Like vultures, the Northern Crested Caracara generally scavenges for its food, eating mostly carrion, but also is an opportunist hunter of injured or young small mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates.  It frequently is found with vultures at a food source, but is dominant to them and will chase them from a roadkill or other carrion.  They will steal food from other birds.  Unlike other falcons, Crested Caracaras fly low to the ground and hunt mainly by hopping along on foot, usually alone or in family groups up to five birds.  Adults maintain a home range averaging about 1500 hectares, but juveniles can be nomadic and found in larger congregations.

The Federal Government and Florida State have listed the Florida population as threatened in recognition of decline to an estimated 500 individuals, due primarily to habitat loss.  Other US populations have experienced significant decline in the past but appear to have stabilized (with the caveat that it is difficult to census population numbers).  Changes in land use that increase pasture and some agricultural land sometimes benefit the Crested Caracara.  However these birds are vulnerable to hunting, trapping and poisoning as their scavenging habits are widely considered undesirable.  Habitat decline is still a real factor in their survival as human populations increase and land is converted from prairie and pasture to housing developments and agriculture with tree farms or orchards.  Crested Caracaras are also reportedly affected by increasing traffic due to the fact that they spend much time on road-side carrion.

(BirdLife International 2012; Cornell Lab of Ornithology Staff 2011; Morrison 1996;  Morrison 2001; Morrison and Dwyer 2012; US Fish and Wildlife Service; Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission; Wikipedia 2013)



Rights Holder: Dana Campbell

Trips Where Observed

Antarctica and Argentina
Argentina
Brazil
Chile 2020
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cuba
Ecuador
Mexico to Panama
Mexico, Baja California Sur
Mexico, Veracruz
Panama
Texas

Member Lifelists

Argentina
Ecuador
Mexico
North America
South America
United States
World

Sites Where Observed

Location
Date
Notes
12/25/2001
On the road into the beach.
11/26/2006
2/21/2008
Crested Caracara (Polyborus cheriway) Crested Caracara (Polyborus cheriway)
Just outside of town eating a road-kill cow.
7/15/2011
Southern Caracara (Polyborus plancus )
7/21/2011
11/25/2021
11/26/2021
Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus)Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus) - Juvenile
12/10/2021
12/11/2021
2/3/2024

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