Hensts Goshawk (Accipiter henstii)

Hensts Goshawk

[order] ACCIPITRIFORMES | [family] Accipitridae | [latin] Accipiter henstii | [authority] Schlegel, 1873 | [UK] Hensts Goshawk | [FR] Autour de Henst | [DE] Madagaskarhabicht | [ES] Azor Malgache | [NL] Madagaskarhavik

Subspecies

Genus Species subspecies Region Range
Accipiter henstii AF Madagascar

Genus

Members of the genus Accipiter are small and medium-sized hawks, often called Sparrow-hawks or Goshawks. The females are almost invariably much larger than the males – in some cases weighing twice as much – a level of size dimorphism only exceptionally reached in any other genus Falconiformes. Their wings are short and rounded; the tail usually quite long. They are well adapted for flying through dense bush. Bird-catching Sparrow-hawks generally have long and slender legs, with slender digits, the middle one being especially long. Goshawks are usually larger, with shorter, thicker tarsi and digits and a shorter middle digit. Some smaller species have goshawk-like feet and vice versa, making it difficult on a world-wide basis to subdivide the genus on this or any other broad basis. Although many accipiters feed upon birds moreso than do other hawks, some species take many mammals, especially squirrels; others take lizards, frogs, snakes, insects, even snails. In these species the legs and digits are sometimes slender, but short. Accipiters are rarely crested, but some have very attractive colour patterns. Black phases are present, especially in the tropical species. One in Australia has the only pure white phase. Accipiter is the largest genus in the family, having about fifty species. It is present worldwide, but is especially rich in Papua-New Guinea, where a small island like New Britain may have three to five endemic species or distinct sub-species.

Physical charateristics

A large forest accipiter. Even dark grey-brown above, with slight pale supercilium and pale, heavily-barred underparts, long yellow legs and long tail. Young birds are paler brown above, often with paler feather-bases showing, and are streaked brownish underneath. Very similar to Madagascar Serpent Eagle Eutriorchis astur, though the adult lacks that species’ overall brownish coloration and dark bars in tertials, mantle and crown-feathers. Young birds are easily distinguished by having streaks, not bars, on the underparts. Flight is generally more direct and rapid than Madagascar Serpent Eagle. Almost identical in plumage to Madagascar Sparrowhawk Accipiter madagascariensis, but much larger; differs in having throat barred and streaked, forming a chequered pattern, and in usually having bars on the undertail-coverts.

Listen to the sound of Hensts Goshawk

[audio:http://www.planetofbirds.com/MASTER/ACCIPITRIFORMES/Accipitridae/sounds/Hensts Goshawk.mp3]

Copyright remark: Most sounds derived from xeno-canto


wingspan min.: 0 cm wingspan max.: 0 cm
size min.: 52 cm size max.: 62 cm
incubation min.: 0 days incubation max.: 0 days
fledging min.: 0 days fledging max.: 0 days
broods: 0   eggs min.: 0  
      eggs max.: 0  

Range

Africa : Madagascar. Accipiter henstii is a forest raptor sparsely distributed throughout most of Madagascar but absent from the south-west

Habitat

It occurs in primary forest, both dry deciduous and humid evergreen, and in some secondary woodlands and large Eucalyptus plantations, not always near primary forest, up to 1,800 m

Reproduction

Egg-laying takes place in October-November, and the nest is large and constructed from sticks in the main fork of large trees, including those in Eucalyptus plantations.

Feeding habits

It hunts below the canopy for birds and small mammals, probably including some lemurs

Video Hensts Goshawk

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQDRsRFpyFY

copyright: Martin KennewelL


Conservation

This species may have a very small population, which is threatened by deforestation. It is therefore listed as Near Threatened. If the population was found to be in decline, it might qualify for a higher threat category.
The species is considered vulnerable to deforestation
Hensts Goshawk status Near Threatened

Migration

Sedentary

Distribution map

Hensts Goshawk distribution range map

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