Coopers Hawk

Description
14-20". W.28". A crow-sized hawk, with long tail and short rounded wings. Adult slate-gray above, with dark cap, and finely rust-barred below. Immature brown above, whitish below with fine streaks. Tail tip rounded, not squared-off like the Sharp-shinned Hawk.
Voice
Loud cack-cack-cack-cack.
Habitat
Deciduous and, less often, coniferous forests, especially those interrupted by meadows and clearings.
Nesting
4-5 dull-white eggs, spotted with brown, on a bulky platform of sticks and twigs, usually more than 20' above the ground.
Other
Like its smaller look-alike the Sharp-shinned Hawk, Cooper's feeds mainly on birds, which it chases relentlessly through the woods. It also takes small mammals. During incubation and the early stages of brooding the young, the male bird does all the hunting, bringing food both to his mate and to the nestlings. Cooper's Hawks mature rapidly for birds their size; a full 25 percent of young birds breed the year after they are hatched, and the rest the year after that.
Picture
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