[Tweeters] Mystery Hawk

Steve Loitz steveloitz at gmail.com
Fri Feb 23 08:37:32 PST 2024


Carol,

IMO, it was likely a dark morph Red-tailed Hawk. RTHAs have a very broad
range of plumage, moreso among all of our raptors. WA does get a few
wintering dark morph Rough-tailed Hawks -- Sibley's estimates 10% of
Roughies W of the plains, although I would guess is closer to 1-in-20 (5%)
in WA -- and dark morph RTHAs are even more rare W of the Cascades. Also, a
dark morph Roughie would not have a visible belly band.

If you want to go down the rabbit hole of plumage variation in RTHAs,
consider joining this Facebook group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/856794547783261

BTW, I am a former West Seattle resident. We moved to Eburg eight years
ago. We love it over here, although I do miss my routine birding walks in
West Seattle.

Happy birding,

Steve Loitz
Ellensburg

On Thu, Feb 22, 2024 at 7:22 PM Tom and Carol Stoner <tcstonefam at gmail.com>
wrote:


> I am not good with hawks beyond the common ones in our area. My default

> is Red-tailed unless I have clear field marks that suggest otherwise.

> North of Marysville on I-5 today I got a glimpse of a dark hawk with a deep

> rust breast and a dark brown-black belly band and wings. I didn't see any

> light colors in my brief glimpse. Do Red-tails come in that kind of

> plumage? The picture in Sibley that most resembled the bird I saw was a

> Ferruginous Hawk, but that seems *highly *unlikely.

>

> Any thoughts?

>

> Carol Stoner

> West Seattle

> _______________________________________________

> Tweeters mailing list

> Tweeters at u.washington.edu

> http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters

>



--
Steve Loitz
Ellensburg, WA
steveloitz at gmail.com
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/pipermail/tweeters/attachments/20240223/693b9a51/attachment.html>


More information about the Tweeters mailing list