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Peregrine

Peregrine Falcon Peregrine Both Sexes
Slate-grey, dark crown and moustache. Pale underparts with dark spots on breast.
Distribution map - when and where you are most likely to see the species.
Falco peregrinus
Length: 40-50 cm (16-20")
Wing Span: 95-115 cm (38-46")
Weight: 600-750 g (1½lb - 2lb)
Breeding Pairs: 1500
Present: All Year
Status: Amber
Description   Voice   Feeding   Nesting   Movements   Conservation   My Garden  
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Description

The Peregrine is a large, powerfully built falcon with long pointed wings and relatively short tail. The female (falcon) is larger than the male (tercel), otherwise the appearance of the sexes is similar. For comparison of its size, it is roughly between Sparrowhawk and Goshawk.

They are a bird mostly of uplands and rocky coastline, especially during the breeding season (summer), but move to lowland areas - estuaries and farmland - in the winter. Their breeding range is extending in to our cities.

The adult has slate-grey upperparts with darker head and wings. The underparts are pale with spotted breast and barring on the underside of the wing (underwing). The head has a dark crown and very distinctive black moustache on an otherwise whitish face. The tail has narrow dark bands. The eye ring, cere and legs are yellow.

Juveniles have buff-grey upperparts and dark brown streaks on the pale underparts. The eye ring, cere, and legs are grey-blue.

In flight, Peregrine looks anchor-shaped and is fast and agile, usually with fast wing beats followed by a long glide.

Voice

Choose from Quicktime and mp3. Call
  Quicktime mp3

Peregrines have a number of different calls but one of the more distinctive is a shrill "kee-arrrk kee-arrrk".

Feeding

Peregrines feed mainly on medium sized birds, such as pigeons, game birds and gulls that it catches in flight. When its usual prey is in short supply, mammals (e.g. rabbits) and carrion are eaten.

They usually attack birds in mid-air at high speed, reaching speeds of up to 300 kph (about 190 miles per hour), by diving from high up with its wings almost closed. The Peregrine strikes the prey with its talons, and the impact of the blow either kills the prey or knocks it unconscious, the hooked bill then being used to deliver a killing bite to the back of the neck.

Nesting

Peregrines breed in a wide range of habitats, but nest on a ledge or rocky outcrop. They are spreading into lowland areas and cities where they will nest on tall buildings, such as churches or office blocks.

The eggs are creamy with red-brown blotches, smooth and non-glossy, and about 55 mm by 40 mm. The male and female take turns incubating the eggs, but most of the incubation is done by the hen. Both adults feed the young.

Breeding Data
Breeding Starts Number of Clutches Number of Eggs Incubation (days) Fledge (days)
March 1 2-6 #28-29 c. 35-42

Movements

British Peregrines are mostly sedentary, though some move from the uplands to lowlands for the winter (altitudinal migration).

Some Scandinavian birds winter in Britain.

Conservation

Peregrines have for a long time been persecuted, chiefly by gamekeepers and racing pigeon keepers, but their numbers are slowly recovering. Despite this, they remain on the Amber List because the European population is a cause for concern.

My Garden

Peregrines have not been seen in our neighbourhood, but there are reports of breeding birds in Derbyshire and wintering birds in the city and neighbouring towns.


Last revision: 17 Mar 2008
Copyright © David Gains 1999-2008.