Red Kite

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Red Kite
Image:Milvus milvus R(ThKraft).jpg
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Accipitridae
Subfamily: Milvinae
Genus: Milvus
Species: M. milvus
Binomial name
Milvus milvus
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The Red Kite (Milvus milvus) is a medium-large bird of prey in the family Accipitridae, which also includes many other diurnal raptors such as eagles, buzzards and harriers. The species is currently endemic to the Western Palearctic region in Europe and northwest Africa, though formerly also occurred just outside in northern Iran.[2] It is a rare species which is resident in the milder parts of its range in western Europe and northwest Africa, but birds from northeastern and central Europe winter further south and west, reaching south to Turkey. Vagrants have reached north to Finland and south to Israel and Libya.[2]

Contents

[edit] Physical characteristics and behaviour

The Red Kite is 60–66 cm long with a 175–195 cm wingspan; males have a weight of 800–1200 g, and females 1000–1300 g.[2] It is an elegant bird, soaring with long wings held at a dihedral, and long forked tail twisting as it changes direction. The body, upper tail and wing coverts are rufous. The white primary flight feathers contrast with the black wing tips and dark secondaries. Apart from the weight difference, the sexes are similar, but juveniles have a buff breast and belly. The call is a thin piping, similar to but less mewling than Common Buzzard.

The species nests in trees, often close to other kites; in winter, many kites will roost together. In the spring the nests are obvious at the tops of trees. From a distance they look like rookeries, including the swirling pattern of the birds. From closer to, one can see that the birds are not rooks but kites because of the more slender wings.

At signs of danger a mother will signal the young who will "play dead" to the extent that a fox will believe them to be dead and leave them, thinking it can return to eat them later.

[edit] Differences between adults and juveniles

Adults differ from juveniles in a number of characteristics:

  • Adults are overall more deeply rufous, compared with the more washed out colour of juveniles;
  • Adults have black breast-streaks whereas on juveniles these are pale;
  • Juveniles have a less deeply-forked tail, with a dark subterminal band;
  • Juveniles have pale tips to all of the greater-coverts (secondary and primary) on both the upper- and under-wings, forming a long narrow pale line; adults have pale fringes to upperwing secondary-coverts only.

These differences hold throughout most of the first year of a bird's life.

[edit] Distribution

In the Middle Ages, Red Kites were much more widespread, their scavenging habits making them the refuse collectors of the day, but their numbers have much decreased through illegal persecution and poisoning. Rumours spread amongst the farming community that they were capable of killing sheep, as they were often found scavenging off animal carcasses. In reality, they will only take small live prey as well as carrion, and will rob other birds. Their scavenging nature makes them particularly vulnerable to accidental or deliberate illegal poisoning, where they scavenge the carcass of an animal that has been poisoned, and succumb to the poison themselves.

[edit] Europe

Image:Bielik kania.jpg
Red Kite, top, mobbing an adult White-tailed Eagle.

According to a report by the Welsh Kite Trust,[3] the UK is the only country in which the Red Kite population is increasing. Red Kites are decreasing in their three strongholds of Spain, France and Germany, and population increases have stagnated in Sweden and Switzerland.

[edit] United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, the breeding population eventually became restricted to a handful of pairs in Wales,[4] but recently the Welsh population has been supplemented by re-introductions in England and Scotland. In 1989 six Swedish birds were released at a site in north Scotland and four Swedish and one Welsh bird in Buckinghamshire. Altogether, 93 birds of Swedish and Spanish origin were released at each of the sites. In the second stage of reintroduction in 1995 and 1996, further birds were brought over from Germany to populate the areas of Dumfries and Galloway, and the Derwent Valley.

The reintroductions in The Chilterns have been a particular success, with a now well-established strong population across Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire. The Kites are a common sight above the houses of the Buckinghamshire village of Stokenchurch, the Oxfordshire town of Wallingford and their surrounding areas. Sightings are common along the M40 between Oxford and Wycombe, all the way down to Reading and Newbury on the M4. In June 2006, the UK-based Northern Kites Project reported that kites have bred in the Derwent Valley in Gateshead for the first time since the re-introduction.[5]

[edit] Ireland

Red Kites were extinct in Ireland by the middle nineteenth century, due to persecution, poisoning and woodland clearance. Some Scottish pairs did visit Ireland in the summers, but it was proposed by statisticians that only one pair had nested permanently. In May 2007, Minister for the Environment Heritage and Local Government Dick Roche announced an agreement to bring at least 100 birds from Wales to restock the population as part of a 5-year programme in the Wicklow Mountains, similar to the earlier Golden Eagle On the 19th July 2007 the first thirty red kites were released in Co. Wicklow. project.[6]

[edit] Populations and trends

The following figures (mostly estimates) have been collated from various sources.[7][8][2][9] They cover most of the countries in which Red Kites are believed to have bred.

 
Country Year Pairs Trend Notes
Image:Flag of Norway.svg Norway 1980 0 0 Bred occasionally in 19th century
Image:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden 2000s 1000 + Increase from 400 pairs in 1993
Image:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark 2004 24 + Extinct c.1920, then recolonised (from Sweden) 1970s
Image:Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland 2006 104 + Extinct 1886, reintroduced 1989–1992
Image:NIShape.gif Northern Ireland 2007 0 0 Reintroduction due to start in 2008
Image:Flag of Ireland.svg Ireland 2007 0 + Reintroduction ongoing
Image:Flag of Wales 2.svg Wales 2006 400–500 + Declined to 2 pairs in 1930s, then recovery
Image:Flag of England.svg England 2006 388+ + Extinct 1870s, reintroduced 1989–1992
Image:Flag of France.svg France ca.1995 2250–4200 0/– 2300–2900 pairs 1980s
Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands ca.1998 <5 + Extinct 1852, recolonised 1976
Image:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium ca.1995 50–60 + Declined to 1–3 pairs early 1970s, then recovery
Image:Flag of Luxembourg.svg Luxembourg 1997 46 +  
Image:Flag of Germany.svg Germany 1999 9000–12000 15000–25000 pairs 1980s
Image:Flag of Poland.svg Poland ca.1998 650–700 + 400–450 pairs 1980s
Image:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia 1989 <1  ?  
Image:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia 1992 0–50 + Extinct 1964, then recolonised
Image:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania 1988 1–2 + Extinct, then recolonised 1981
Image:Flag of Russia.svg Russia 1992 0–50  ?  
Image:Flag of Belarus.svg Belarus 1997 1 +/– Extinct 1950s, recolonised 1985; 10 pairs 1990
Image:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine 1990 5–8  
Image:Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Czech Republic 1993–94 30–50 + Extinct late 19th century, recolonised 1975
Image:Flag of Slovakia.svg Slovakia 1992 10–20  ?–  
Image:Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland ca.1995 800–1000 + Declined 19th century, later recovery; 235–300 pairs late 1980s
Image:Flag of Austria.svg Austria 2000 0–2 Extinct 1950, recolonised 1970s; 10 pairs 1990
Image:Flag of Hungary.svg Hungary ca.1998 1+ 30 pairs 1950s
Image:Flag of Romania.svg Romania 1995 15–20  ?+  
Image:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova 1990 1  ?  
Image:Flag of Bulgaria.svg Bulgaria 0  ? May breed but no proof
Image:Flag of Croatia.svg Croatia 0  ? 2–5 pairs 1980s
Image:Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Bosnia and Herzegovina 0  ?  
Image:Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg Yugoslavia 0  ? Formerly commoner
Image:Flag of Montenegro.svg Montenegro 1995 0  ?  
Image:Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia  ?  
Image:Flag of Macedonia.svg Republic of Macedonia 0  ?  
Image:Flag of Italy.svg Italy ca.2002 300–400 0/+ 70–150 pairs late 1980s
Image:Flag of Albania.svg Albania  ? Bred 1906
Image:Flag of Greece.svg Greece 0  ?  
Image:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey 0  ? May have bred in past but no proof
Image:Flag of Algeria.svg Algeria 0  ? Bred in 19th century, now extinct
Image:Flag of Tunisia.svg Tunisia 0  ? Bred in 19th century, now extinct
Image:Flag of Spain.svg Spain 1994 3328–4044 10000 pairs 1977
Image:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal ca.1995 100–200 +/0  
Image:Flag of Morocco.svg Morocco ca.1992 10–100 In danger of extinction
Image:Flag of the Canary Islands.svg Canary Islands 0 0 Extinct 1970s
Image:Flag of Cape Verde.svg Cape Verde 2000 1? 50–75 pairs late 1980s; effectively extinct

[edit] Systematics

The Red Kite has been known to successfully hybridize with the Black Kite in captivity where both species were kept together, and in the wild on the Cape Verde Islands.

The Red Kites on the Cape Verde Islands are (or rather were) quite distinct in morphology, being somewhat intermediate with Black Kites. The question whether the Cape Verde Kite should be considered a distinct species (Milvus fasciicauda) or a Red Kite subspecies was never really settled. A recent mtDNA study[10] on museum specimens suggests that Cape Verde birds did not form a monophyletic lineage among or next to Red Kites.

However, this interpretation is problematic: mtDNA analysis is very susceptible to hybridization events, the evolutionary history of the Cape Verde population is not known, and the genetic relationship of Red Kites in general is very confusing, with geographical proximity being no indicator of genetic relatedness and the overall genetic similarity high,[11] perhaps indicating a relict species.

Given the morphological distinctness of the Cape Verde birds and the fact that the Cape Verde population was isolated from other populations of Red Kites, it cannot be conclusively resolved at this time whether the Cape Verde population wasn't a distinct subspecies (as M. migrans fasciicauda) or even species that frequently absorbed stragglers from the migrating European populations into its gene pool. More research seems warranted, but at any rate the Cape Verde population is effectively extinct since 2000, all surviving birds being hybrids with Black Kites (which merely raises further questions about their taxonomic status).

[edit] Observation

One of the best places to see the Red Kite is Scania in southern Sweden. It may be observed in one of its breeding locations such as the Kullaberg Nature Preserve near Molle (Hogan 2005). One of the best places to see them in the UK is Gigrin Farm near Rhayader, mid Wales, where hundreds are fed by the local farmer as a tourist attraction.[12] See also Red Kite feeding in Wales.

More recently in the UK the Oxfordshire part of the Chilterns has many Red Kites. The best place to see them is on the Ridgeway, but they are advancing north-westwards over the flatter centre of Oxfordshire and have been seen in Cowley (East Oxford).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Crochet, Pierre-André (2005): Recent DNA studies of kites. Birding World 18(12): 486-488. HTML section list
  • Hogan, C. Michael (2005): Kullaberg Nature Reserve, Sweden. Lumina technologies.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2006). Milvus milvus. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 20 Dec 2006. Database entry includes a lengthy justification of why this species is near threatened
  2. ^ a b c d Snow, D. W. & Perrins, C. M. (1998). The Birds of the Western Palearctic Concise Edition. OUP ISBN 0-19-854099-X.
  3. ^ Red Kites decline in Europe. Welsh Kite Trust (undated). Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  4. ^ BirdLife International 2006
  5. ^ Delight as red kite chicks hatch. BBC News (16 June 2006). Retrieved on 2006-10-27.
  6. ^ http://www.environ.ie/en/Heritage/NationalParksandWildlife/News/MainBody,5384,en.htm
  7. ^ Carter, Ian (2001): The Red Kite. Arlequin Press, Chelmsford, UK. 187pp.
  8. ^ Cramp, S. (1980). The Birds of the Western Palearctic Volume 2. Oxford ISBN 0-19-857505-X.
  9. ^ Holloway, S. (1996). The Historical Atlas of Breeding Birds in Britain and Ireland: 1875–1900. T & A D Poyser ISBN 0-85661-094-1.
  10. ^ Jeff A. Johnson, Richard T. Watson and David P. Mindell (2005) Prioritizing species conservation: does the Cape Verde kite exist? Proc. R. Soc. B 272:1365–1371 [1]
  11. ^ Schreiber, Arnd; Stubbe, Michael & Stubbe, Annegret (2000): Red kite (Milvus milvus) and black kite (M. migrans): minute genetic interspecies distance of two raptors breeding in a mixed community (Falconiformes: Accipitridae). Biol. J. Linn. Soc. 69'(3): 351–365. doi:10.1006/bijl.1999.0365 (HTML abstract)
  12. ^ Red Kite Feeding Station - Gigrin Farm. Retrieved on 2006-10-27.

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Milvus milvus

an:Milaneta bg:Червена каня ca:Milana cs:Luňák červený co:Milvu cy:Barcud Coch da:Rød glente de:Rotmilan es:Milvus milvus eo:Ruĝa milvo fr:Milan royal fy:Reade Glee gl:Millafre real it:Milvus milvus ka:ბორა (ფრინველი) lt:Rudasis peslys hu:Vörös kánya nl:Rode wouw ja:アカトビ no:Glente oc:Milvus milvus pl:Kania ruda pt:Milhafre-real ru:Красный коршун sk:Haja červená sl:Rjavi škarnik fi:Isohaarahaukka sv:Röd glada tr:Kızıl çaylak

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