Sharp-shinned Hawk

Accipiter striatus

Juvenile Sharp-shinned Hawk.
Vern Faber, Shutterstock.

Urban History

Sharp-shinned Hawks are common winter residents in Seattle from September through March, but they are rare during the breeding season. Two reasons probably account for their scarcity as urban nesters:
– Relative lack of dense conifer stands for nest concealment, and
– Abundance of larger raptor predators, such as Cooper’s Hawks, Barred Owls, and Peregrine Falcons. In June 1994, Ed Deal found a Sharp-shinned Hawk leg on the roof of a downtown Seattle tower, no doubt a Peregrine kill.
Successful nests have been documented in suburbs of north Seattle (2013) and east of Lake Washington (2014).

All birds are adults except in photos 4 and 8. (1) auldscot, Shutterstock. (2) Brian Lasenby, Shutterstock. (3) Jordan Feeg, Shutterstock. (4) Chris Hill, Shutterstock. (5) Wikimedia Creative Commons. (6) Mike Morel, USFWS, Pixnio. (7) stonebird, Flickr. (8) MediaFuzeBox, Shutterstock.

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