Thursday, May 15, 2025

Blonde Hawk

 

Florida Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus extimus
showing its pale head and light breast. 
Palm Beach County, Florida. 

There are some odd looking Red-shouldered Hawks (Buteo lineatus) in Florida.  Red-shouldered Hawks are found across Eastern North America and along the west coast.  Most Red-shouldered Hawks have dark brown heads, reddish breasts, barred tails, a checkerboard pattern on the wings and the reddish-brown feathers on their shoulders that given them their name.  But the hawks in Florida are unique.  They are distinguished by light breasts and pale heads. I think they look like blondes.  These Florida hawks belong to their own subspecies, Buteo lineatus extimus, and are found across the peninsula. 

Red-shouldered Hawks, in Florida and elsewhere, are medium sized raptors that are usually associated with forests near freshwater. They often sit quietly on a perch watching for small mammals, insects, birds or reptiles then swoop in to catch their prey.  Red-shouldered Hawks are quite vocal, giving loud, repeated screams.  In the mating season, pairs have impressive mating flights that involve soaring and calling.  They make stick nests high in trees and typically lay 3-4 eggs.  Juvenile Red-shouldered Hawks can be told from adults by their heavily streaked breasts.     

The eastern subspecies of Red-shouldered Hawk 
(Buteo linearus linearus) has a dark brown head and 
reddish breast. 
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Eastern subspecies of Red-shouldered Hawk preparing to take flight.
Rowan County, North Carolin
a. 

Eastern subspecies of Red-shouldered Hawk lifting off.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Eastern form of Red-shouldered Hawk on nest.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Eastern form of Red-shouldered Hawk 
hunting from a perch. 
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Immature Red-shouldered Hawk,
eastern subspecies.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

The Florida Red-shouldered Hawks are smaller than their northern and western relatives and can use more open habitats than others of their species.  These include the Sawgrass (Cladium mariscus) marshes of the Everglades and prairies with ponds and scattered trees. 

Florida Red-shouldered Hawk.
Palm Beach County, Florida. 

The Florida Red-shouldered Hawks not only look different from other Red-shouldered Hawks they are genetically distinct.  This divergence from the rest of the continent’s Red-shouldered Hawks probably happened when the Florida birds were isolated during the last ice age.   

Florida form of Red-shouldered Hawk.
Palm Beach County, Florida. 

I always enjoy seeing these blonde Red-shouldered Hawks when visiting Florida.  They look quite elegant perched on branch, looking for the next meal.

 


Thursday, May 1, 2025

Pollen Season

 

Pine (Pinus sp.) pollen coating a car.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Every spring pollen fills the air.  On some days you can see pine trees exhaling yellow clouds of microscopic pollen grains.  Pollen coats cars, and other outdoor surfaces and it aggravates allergies of multitudes of people.  What is going on? Why is it seasonal?  How does it cause the discomfort of allergies? 

Pollen dusting the lid of a trash can.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Pollen grains are produced by most seed plants, and each contains a sperm nucleus, the plant's male gamete.  The pollen is transferred to another cone or flower, often on another plant, and there it may fertilize an egg cell giving rise to the next generation.  Some plants use pollinators such as insects, birds or mammals to carry pollen.  Others release their pollen into the air.  Wind pollination is inefficient so lots of pollen must be produced. This wind pollination is the source of pollen season problems.     

Male flowers of Red Maple (Acer rubra).
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Pollen season starts in our part of the world in late winter.  Maples (Acer sp.) start to flower in late February or early March.  Red Maple (Acer rubra) makes separate male and female flowers on the same tree.  The male flowers have anthers that dangle in the breeze and shed their pollen.  Female flowers are fertilized, and in a few weeks, tiny, winged fruits emerge from the female flowers. 

A pollen producing male catkin
of River Birch (Betula nigra).
Rowan County, North Carolina.  

River Birch (Betula nigra) is another early tree that releases pollen.  Like the maples, River Birch has separate male and female flowers on the same tree.  The male, pollen releasing flowers are borne on cylindrical, hanging bunches of flowers called catkins.  

Male cones of Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda).
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Male cones of Loblolly Pine that have released 
their pollen and fallen from the tree.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Pines (Pinus sp.) probably produce more pollen than the other spring trees.  Pines are conifers and do not have flowers but release pollen from male cones.  These are smaller than female cones and each cone can make many thousands of pollen grains.  These float through the air and a small number land on the female cones that produces the pine seeds.  Pines are the main culprits in giving that yellow dusting to our cars in spring. 

Catkins on a male tree of Black Willow (Salix nigra).
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Black Willow (Salix nigra) is a flowering tree that prefers to grow near water.  It has separate male and female trees and in the spring catkins on the male trees release pollen.  Some of this pollen pollenates flowers on female trees but much of it lands on the surface of water.  This pollen can form rafts that are pushed around by the wind.  After a few weeks cottony fruits float from the female trees to disperse the willow.    

Male catkins of Willow Oak (Quercus phellos).
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Oaks (Quercus sp.) are magnificent trees and also produce abundant, airborne pollen.  Oaks make separate male and female flowers on the same tree.  The male flowers are in catkins and the product of wind pollination is the familiar acorn.  After the pollen has been released the catkins fall off the tree and accumulate in windrows beneath the tree and clog gutters on houses.  

Male Catkins of White Oak (Quercus alba).
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Airborne tree pollen is a major cause of spring allergies.  We know the symptoms; runny nose, watery eyes, sneezing, shortness of breath.  Pollen that is inhaled can evokes an immune response that causes all these problems. Our immune system recognizes pollen as foreign and releases powerful chemicals like histamine and cytokines.  This response causes the side effects we experience as allergies.  Not all wind pollenated trees are to blame though. Oaks, willows, maples, birches and other trees can all cause allergic reactions, but pines usually do not.  While pines produce great clouds of pollen, but most people do not react to it.    

Masses of oaks catkins littering a street.
Rowan County, North Carolina. 

Plants are going about their reproductive business in pollen season.  Many organizations, including several weather forecasting groups track pollen levels and report on them each day.   Climate change has caused plants to flower earlier in the year and prolonged this season of discomfort.  But as summer comes along, the pollen season passes and so do the allergies. 

Oak catkins that have shed their pollen mark
the end of spring pollen season.
Rowan County, North Carolina.