Wild Birds

Grey Kestrels

The Grey Kestrels (Falco ardosiaceus) is an African bird of prey belonging to the falcon family Falconidae. Its closest relatives are the Banded Kestrel and Dickinson’s Kestrel and the three are sometimes placed in the subgenus Dissodectes.

Description

It is a fairly small, stocky kestrel with a large, flat-topped head and fairly short wings that don’t reach past the tip of the tail when at rest. It is 28-33 cm long with a wingspan of 58-72 cm and a weight of up to 300 grams. The female is 4-11% larger and 5-11% heavier than the male.

The plumage of the adult is uniformly dark grey apart from darker wingtips, faint dark streaking on the body, and slightly barred flight feathers. The feet and cere (soft skin surrounding the nostrils) are yellow and there is bare yellow skin around the eye.

Grey Kestrel (Falco ardosiaceus)

The most similar species is the Sooty Falcon which has a more rounded head, long wings extending past the tail, and less yellow around the eye.

Juvenile Grey Kestrels are browner than the adults with a greenish cere and greenish around the eye. Juvenile Dickinson’s Kestrels are similar but have a barred tail and a more strongly barred underwing.

Grey or Gray Kestrel

Calls / Vocalizations

The Grey Kestrel is generally silent outside the breeding season but has a shrill, chattering call and a rattling whistle.

Habitat and range

It inhabits savannas, open woodland, and forest clearings. It favors areas with palm trees, especially near water. It often perches on exposed branches, telegraph poles, and wires.

It is widespread in West and Central Africa but is absent from densely forested regions including parts of the Congo Basin. Its range extends east to Ethiopia and western parts of Kenya and Tanzania. In the south, it reaches northern parts of Namibia and Zambia and vagrants have appeared in Malawi. The total range covers about 12 million km². In West Africa, there is some movement northward in the wet season and southward in the dry season.

Feeding / Diet

It is a crepuscular bird, most active at dawn and dusk. It generally hunts from a high perch but occasionally hovers. I

t feeds mainly on insects, lizards and small mammals such as bats but will also take birds, amphibians, and worms. Prey is usually caught on the ground. It will sometimes feed on oil palm nuts, one of the few birds of prey to eat vegetable matter.

Breeding / Nesting

Breeding occurs from March to June in the north of its range and from August to December in the south. Courting pairs perform mutual soaring displays.

The eggs are usually laid in the nest of a Hamerkop; most often an unoccupied nest but occasionally Hamerkops will be forced out. Sometimes the kestrels will use the nest of another bird or a hole in a tree.

There are two to five eggs in a clutch. They are whitish with reddish or brown markings and are incubated for 26-31 days. The young birds fledge after about 30 days.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Gordon Ramel

Gordon is an ecologist with two degrees from Exeter University. He's also a teacher, a poet and the owner of 1,152 books. Oh - and he wrote this website.

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