David H. Ellis, Tim Craig, Erica Craig, Sergej Postupalsky, Charles T. LaRue, R. Wayne Nelson, Daniel W. Anderson, Charles J. Henny, Jeff Watson, Brian A. Millsap, James W. Dawson, Kenneth L. Cole, Elwood M. Martin, Antoni Margalida, Peter Kung
Journal of Raptor Research 43 (3), 175-198, (1 September 2009) https://doi.org/10.3356/JRR-08-110.1
KEYWORDS: Buzzard, eagle, falcon, hawk, nest, nest materials, owl, raven
From surveys in many countries, we report raptors using unusual nesting materials (e.g., paper money, rags, metal, antlers, and large bones) and unusual nesting situations. For example, we documented nests of Steppe Eagles [Aquila nipalensis] and Upland Buzzards [Buteo hemilasius] on the ground beside well-traveled roads, Saker Falcon [Falco cherrug] eyries in attics and a cistern, and Osprey [Pandion haliaetus] nests on the masts of boats and on a suspended automobile. Other records include a Golden Eagle [A. chrysaetos] nest 7.0 m in height, believed to be the tallest nest ever described, and, for the same species, we report nesting in rudimentary nests. Some nest sites are within a few meters of known predators or competitors. These unusual observations may be important in revealing the plasticity of a species' behavioral repertoire.