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Common Nighthawk

 
Animal Encyclopedia: Common nighthawk

Chordeiles minor

SUBFAMILY

Chordeilinae

TAXONOMY

Caprimulgus minor J. R. Forster, 1771, South Carolina. Nine subspecies.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Nighthawk, American or booming nighthawk; French: Engoulevent d'Amérique; German: Falkennachtschwalbe; Spanish: Añapero Yanqui.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

8.7–9.7 in (22–25 cm); 1.4–3.8 oz (40–107 g). Dark brown, buff, grayish white, and cinnamon cryptic coloration. Sexually dimorphic.

DISTRIBUTION

Breeds over much of North and Central America from Canada to Panama; winters in South America from Ecuador to northern Argentina.

HABITAT

Mainly in open habitats, including woodland clearings, prairies, savannas, sand dunes, and cities.

BEHAVIOR

Active from well before dusk until after dawn, often flying high in air. Commonly in flocks outside breeding season, sometimes of up to a thousand birds. Displaying male makes booming sound as air rushes through primaries during aerial dive.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Catches diet of insects mainly on wing during continuous hawking flight; regularly takes insects that have been attracted to street lights.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Unlined nest site on ground (or flat roof of building) with clutch of two eggs. Incubation usually by female for a period of 18–20 days. Young have cryptically patterned down, are fed by both parents, and fledge at 25–30 days.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not threatened.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

More often noticed by humans than most other nightjars in North America because of habit of nesting on flat roofs of buildings in towns and cities and activity and calls during twilight or even daylight.

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Western Bird Guide: common nighthawk
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Chordeiles minor 9½″ (24 cm). A slim-winged, gray-brown bird, often seen high in the air; flies with easy strokes, "changing gear" to quicker erratic strokes. Note the broad white bar across the pointed wing. Male has a white bar across its notched tail and a white throat. Prefers dusk, but may be abroad at midday.

Voice: A nasal peent or pee-ik. In aerial display, the male dives, then zooms up sharply with a sudden deep whir of wings.

Range: Canada to Panama. Winters to Argentina.

Habitat: Open country to mountains; open pine woods; often seen in air over cities, towns. Sits on ground, posts, rails, roofs, limbs.


Wikipedia: Common Nighthawk
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Common Nighthawk

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Caprimulgiformes
Family: Caprimulgidae
Genus: Chordeiles
Species: C. minor
Binomial name
Chordeiles minor
(Forster,JR, 1771)
Synonyms

Chordeiles virginianus

The Common Nighthawk, Chordeiles minor, is a nightjar.

The adults have brown feathers with some darker ones too (some black feathers), gray and white patterning on the upperparts and breast. The long wings are black and reveal a white bar when in flight. The tail is dark with white barring and the underparts are white with black bars. The adult male has a white throat while the female has a light brown throat.

Their breeding habitat is open country across North America. They usually nest on bare ground, sometimes in raised locations including stumps or gravel roofs. They especially favor burned areas in forests. The two eggs are laid directly on bare ground—there is no nest. Incubation is performed largely by the female and lasts for about 20 days. Young fledge at about 20 days of age. There may be a second brood in the southern part of the United States.

These birds winter in South America. They migrate in flocks. The Common Nighthawk is a very rare vagrant to western Europe.

They catch flying insects on the wing, mainly foraging near dawn and dusk (crepuscular), sometimes at night with a full moon or near street lighting.

The call is a short peet usually heard overhead. The male performs an aerial display during courtship, creating a booming sound near the end of a steep dive. The sound is produced by air rushing through the wingtips.

Common Nighthawks are called bullbats in many parts of the United States. The origin of this name is not clear. The erratic flight and peronal crepuscular habits of the nighthawk resemble those of bats. In addition, the name (perhaps bull) may refer to the loud booming sound of the male's display.

The scientific name for this species, minor, leads to some confusion. Originally this species was placed in genus Caprimulgus, and it is indeed smaller than some other members of that genus, such as the Whip-poor-will, Caprimulgus vociferus. However, with the Common Nighthawk moved to the genus Chordeiles, it is in the odd position of being named minor, even though it is larger than the Lesser Nighthawk, Chordeiles acutipennis.

References

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Copyrights:

Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Western Bird Guide. Peterson Field Guide to Western Birds, by Roger Tory Peterson. Copyright © 1990 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Common Nighthawk" Read more