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Secretary bird
Sagittarius serpentarius
-19.0189, 16.3464
Field Notes
Description:
This bird of prey is largely terrestrial, roosting in acacia trees at night. It has an eagle-like body on crane-like legs which increases the bird’s height to as much as 1.3 m (4 ft) tall. It has the longest legs of any raptor and must bend its legs in a crouch to feed or drink. Their lower legs have heavy scales that may protect them while walking through the brush or when attacking their prey. They eat insects, mammals ranging in size from mice to hares and mongoose, crabs, lizards, snakes, tortoises, young birds, bird eggs, and sometimes dead animals killed in grass or bush fires.
Secretary Birds associate in monogamous pairs. During courtship, they display by soaring high with undulating flight patterns and calling with guttural croaking. Males and females can also perform a ground display by chasing each other with their wings up and back. They usually mate on the ground, although some do so in Acacia trees. Secretary birds will stay close to their mate even if their chick has already left. Both the parents feed the young. At 60 days, the young start to flap their wings, and by day 65–80 are able to fledge. The young are preyed upon by crows, ravens, hornbills, large owls and kites as they are vulnerable in Acacia tree tops, with no known incidents of predation on adults.
Habitat:
Sub-Saharan Africa, from Senegal to Somalia and south to the Cape of Good Hope; grasslands and savannas.
Notes:
Its common name is often thought to come from the crest of long quill-like feathers, lending the bird the appearance of a secretary with quill pens tucked behind his or her ear. A more recent hypothesis is that "secretary" is borrowed from a French corruption of the Arabic saqr-et-tair or "hunter-bird." It appears on the coats of arms of Sudan and South Africa. In 1935, the species was moved to its own family, distinct from all other birds of prey.
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