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On Mar 17, 2021, at 12:53 PM, Susan Rosine <u5b2...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Wanted to throw my two bits in on this Merlin discussion as I’m fortunate enough to get to experience both “Taiga” (Falco columbarius columbarius) and “Black” Merlins (F.c. suckleyi) fairly regularly. The “Taiga” subspecies is the common bird we have around in North Idaho where we split time, and can say fairly definitively all of the photos shared here are not of typical “Taiga”s , but rather more closely resemble “Black”s. “Taiga” Merlins always give a warmer appearance as most show reddish brown to brown markings on the underparts, and dark bluish grey to brown upper parts depending on age and sex. “Black”s on the other hand always seem cold dark grey to sooty without much if any warm hues at any age – think “Harlan’s” Red-tail vibe. There was “Black” Merlin one fall at the Vancouver, BC airport (apparently liked to hunt the taxi way used by flights to and from Seattle; saw several times) which looked very much like the bird Dave had up at Fort Collins City Park; given the amount of white and narrow streaking, thinking an immature bird.
While on the topic of unusual raptors, we had what was possibly an adult “KRIDER’S” RED-TAILED HAWK at Huston Park (SW Denver, Denver Co.) this afternoon (17 Mar.’21) which would be WAY out of place, so still consternating. Initially noticed as it was being harassed by a couple of antagonistic crows and realized how pale the bird was, so started thinking light phase “Harlan’s”. However to my point above, this guy seemed “warm” colored, then when it finally flushed, noted pale, almost white, pinkish tail, pale head, white “flash” to the primary bases, well defined, though short patagial markings, and almost entirely white underparts save a faint rusty brown belly band – pretty much a Ferruginous Hawk in a Red-tail body. Never saw it’s back well due to light, and couldn’t gauge pale brown vs greyish tone, so still could have been a “Harlan’s” or maybe a hybrid. Will continue to consternate.
In any case the Merlins you guys saw are great birds for Colorado, so glad you are keeping the vicarious birding rolling.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day,
Doug
Denver
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Guys,
Sorry, need to back track a bit. Took another look at Susan’s Merlin from the Arsenal after my own email came through, and have to agree with Nick here, think that bird was actually a “Taiga”, though a certainly a dark one. Note how the markings on its underparts have that “warm”, brownish cast, not a “Black” trait. I do think both John and Dave’s birds lean more towards the “Black” end of the spectrum, particularly the Fort Collis bird; the full black helmet mark quoted for “Black” doesn’t always hold, particularly for young birds. Again, sorry for the confusion, but do enjoy this forum for these types of discussions.
Barred tail between legs,
Doug
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