Great photo - would be interested to know how you took that. What camera, lens? Was timing it hard?
Apparently red kites have a clever trick which buzzards don't have. They can pick up two small mammals or pieces of carrion - first pass grab with talons, then transfer capture to beak, then pick up another one with a second pass. Buzzards can only pick up one at a time.
Maybe there are physical reasons why buzzards can't do this, or maybe they just haven't learnt to do this yet.
Seems also that red kites mostly eat carrion (shouldn't that be carryoff?), rather than capture live creatures - though I'm not absolutely certain.
Also, and I'm not sure about this - perhaps red kites deter buzzards from picking up food if both spot the same food at the same time. In places where these birds are fed deliberately (as part of the reintroduction programs), the buzzards seem to come in later than the red kites - i.e. defer to the red kites.
Apparently red kites have a clever trick which buzzards don't have. They can pick up two small mammals or pieces of carrion - first pass grab with talons, then transfer capture to beak, then pick up another one with a second pass. Buzzards can only pick up one at a time.
Maybe there are physical reasons why buzzards can't do this, or maybe they just haven't learnt to do this yet.
Seems also that red kites mostly eat carrion (shouldn't that be carryoff?), rather than capture live creatures - though I'm not absolutely certain.
Also, and I'm not sure about this - perhaps red kites deter buzzards from picking up food if both spot the same food at the same time. In places where these birds are fed deliberately (as part of the reintroduction programs), the buzzards seem to come in later than the red kites - i.e. defer to the red kites.
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