Peregrine Falcon Rescue



Uploaded by: generatech
Video Description:
A tired and injured peregrine falcon seeks refuge on my stairs. Wildlife rescue workers help him.
UPDATE (8/4/07): The peregrine falcon was removed from the endangered species list in 1999 after recovery due to banning of DDT and groups aiding recovery (www.fws.gov/endangered/). See peregrine falcon stoop speed controversy update below. Rescue Organizations: http://www.WildCareMarin.org
(see the "found animal" link, which I used to get their night phone number) http://www.yuwr.org (Yggdrasil [ig'-dra-sil] Urban Wildlife Rescue) WildCareMarin gave me Yggdrasil's phone number for yuwr.org. http://wildlife.ohlonehumanesociety.org Yggdrasil coordinated the rescue with the Ohlone
[a-lone'-ee] Humane Society. SWISS ORNITHOLOGICAL INSTITUTE www.vogelwarte.ch/ (For English insert link in BabelFish.altavista.com & choose "German to English")
FALCON STOOP (DIVE) SPEED CONTROVERSY ===================================== ***ROUND 1*** SWISS with excellent research versus hearsay (1) The Swiss Ornithological Institute used military tracking radar and measured Peregrine Falcon stoop speed at 115 mph maximum with a maximum dive angle clo
se to 45 degrees. SEE BELOW FOR MORE INFO DIRECTLY FROM THE SWISS versus (2) Bird literature and textbooks, which for years have stated the peregrine falcon's maximum stoop speed is about 242 mph without referencing any research. I gave credit to the Swiss because they actually and accurate
ly measure falcon angle and speed (and claim they were the first to do so); they used military tracking radar instead of estimating speed or merely parroting the old literature, which the Swiss discount as unsubstantiated. The Swiss point out they do not claim the peregrine falcon cannot dive faster
, but that peregrine falcons never dived faster than 115 mph when the Swiss measured them. ***ROUND 2*** SWISS versus SKYDIVER (not hearsay) (3) I asked Cornell University's Ornithologists about this controversy since Cornell posts the higher and long-believed speed on its website. A Cornell per
son promptly replied that although they have not measured the speed themselves, they referred to an experiment by a falconer who also skydives. The skydiver jumped out of planes with his peregrine falcon and sometimes had a speed-measuring device attached to his falcon's tail: he clocked the falcon
diving at up to 242 mph. (Unfortunately, the reference sent to me from Cornell was a brochure for a private jet company that explained the skydiver's experiment with his Peregrine Falcon; the jet plane brochure stated that NAFA (n-a-f-a.org) North American Falconers Association first published the
skydiver's article (I emailed NAFA and await their reply and the article). SEE BELOW FOR INFO ABOUT THE SKYDIVER'S EXPERIMENT (4) I asked the Cornell person about the validity of comparing the vertical falls of the skydiver/falcon chasing a vertically traveling prey (the skydiver with a lure)
with the natural stoop environment of a 45-degree angled stoop. Though the Swiss measured a stoop angle no more than about 45 degrees, the Cornell person said he's seen stooping that looked like it was straight down from his vantage point; he also said many stoops he's seen occurred at a less steep
angle and approached the prey from behind, with the falcon often going slightly lower than the prey before turning up for the collision. MY CONCLUSION UNTIL MORE RESEARCH/DATA ARRIVE If the skydiver's experiment was valid, and it *seems* like it was even though so far I've only read about it in a
jet plane brochure (cough, cough), then I conclude the following until I see more research: (1) The Peregrine Falcon can dive straight down as fast as 242 mph; however, a cheetah pushed out of an airplane could also dive straight down at speeds probably near 120 mph even though its max land spee
d in well under 90 mph; that's obviously not a fair analogy since falcons fly and cheetahs do not, but the question is whether a skydiver-led freefall is close enough to being like a peregrine falcon naturally stooping without human involvement (especially straight down since peregrine falcon stoopi
ng so far has been accurately measured at around 45 degrees). Also, there's a trade-off between accuracy and speed. Because most prey moves horizontally (not vertically like the skydiver w/lure), the difficulty of timing a collision with horizontally traveling prey must be much more for a peregrine
falcon diving straight down (a 90 degree collision) than for a peregrine falcon diving at 45 degrees, especially behind prey, which would put the falcon closer to the prey's vector besides improving the odds of surprise and therefore not causing evasive action by the prey. Maybe falcons dive straig
ht down for short period then lessen the angle for accuracy (but this is conjecture, not research). Quantum Mechanics side note: the fact that no observer leaves the observed undisturbed (at the quantum level) is really greatly ignored by the skydiver experiment, which is still amazing; even using
military tracking radar to measure peregrine falcon stooping speed technically disturbs whatever's observed, (quantumly speaking). ******************** MY CONCLUSION: THE PEREGRINE FALCON CAN DIVE AS FAST AS 242 MPH WITH A SKYDIVER, BUT THE FASTEST MEASURED *NATURAL* STOOP SPEED TO DATE IS 115 M
PH. ******************* That's the total known truth I could find. I'll post newer substantiated info when available if I find out about it. I think the Swiss need to test many more Peregrine Falcons stooping, especially stooping for different prey at different altitudes in different environments
. Perhaps measuring 2 peregrine falcons isn't enough; and maybe the type of prey affects the stoop speed along with how hungry the falcons are and their ages. ***************************************************************************************** SWISS INFO ********** Matthias Kestenholz, PhD,
MSc, of the institute promptly answered my email about his research into Peregrine Falcon speed. He explained the research, provided a link to page on the institute's site detailing their use of military-level tracking radar for bird study, and attached a pdf file in German with an English summary
of the specific Falcon speed research. HIS EMAIL ========= "Two stoops of Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus) and two of Barbary Falcon (Falco pelegrinoides) were measured with a tracking radar. In the last decades, our institute has made strong progress in developing this military device to an i
nstrument to study bird migration. We are not only able to track individual birds and to measure precisely their flight direction, flight altitude and flight speed but we also measure wind direction and wind speed, and by calculating these two data sets we get the bird's own contribution to flight s
peed. Just one example to explain what I mean: A bird that is able to reach a speed of 40 kph with the power of its flight muscles, can reach a speed of 70 kph if it gets tailwind support of 30 kph. "Most information about speeds of stooping falcons do not consider the contribution of the wind. T
hey don't either take into consideration stooping angles but it is evident that this considerably influences the speed: the steeper, the faster. "For our two Peregrines, total altitude losses while diving were 250 m and 350 m. Steepest diving angles amounted to 42° and 40°, respectively. Maxim
al speed of 36 and 51 m/s (130 and 184 kph) were recorded. For the two Barbary Falcons, the corresponding values are height losses of 173 m and 189 m, diving angles of 20° and 34°, and maximal speed of 42 and 44 m/s (150 and 158 kph). The 51 m/s (184 kph) of a Peregrine Falcon represents the highe
st speed of a bird accurately measured so far. "But it does by no means say that the birds can't attain even higher speeds. You can find much higher speeds published, including the widely cited estimate of [much higher] kph, but these are in fact "only" estimates but not accurate measurements that
are only possible with the help of a measuring instrument such as our tracking radar (see www.vogelwarte.ch/home.php?lang=d &cap=projekte&subcap=vogelzug&file=../detailprojects.php&titel=Radar-Ornithology&projId=135).
HIS PDF (in German with English summary) ================================== Publication: Der Ornithologische Beobachter 95:107 - 112 (1998) Aus der Schweizerischen Vogelwarte Sempach Title: Sturzfliige von Wanclerfalke Falco peregrinus und Wiistenfalke F. pelegrinoides By Dieter Peter und
Matthias Kestenholz SUMMARY (the rest of the article is in German) Stoops of Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus and Barbary Falcon F. pelegrinoides. - Two stoops of Peregrine Falcons and two of Barbary Falcons were measured with a tracking radar. For the Peregrine Falcons, total altitude losses whil
e diving were 250 m and 350 m. Steepest diving angles amounted to 42° and 40°, respectively. Maximal air speeds of 36 and 51 m/s (130 and 184 km/h) were recorded. For the Barbary Falcons, the corresponding values are height losses of 173 m and 189 m, diving angles of 20° and 34°, and maximal air
speeds of 42 and 44 m/s (150 and 158 km/h). The 5 1 m/s (184 km/h) of a Peregrine Falcon represents the hig¬hest air speed of a bird accurately measured so far. Key words: Falco peregrinus, Falco pelegrinoides.. stooping, flight speed, flight mechanics, tracking radar. Dieter Peter und Matthias
Kestenholz, Schweizerische Vogelwarte, CH-6204 Sempach Matthias Kestenholz, PhD, MSc Swiss Ornithological Institute Luzernerstrasse 6 CH-6204 Sempach www.vogelwarte.ch FULL PUBLISHED STUDY IN PDF (he emailed me this as an attachment; I posted it here:) http://generatech.files-upload.com/358000/P
eterKestenholz1998OrnitholBeobSturzflge.PDF.html (After clicking this link, watch the time countdown from 15 seconds to zero then you can click the "download" link.) ***************************************************************************************** CORNELL SUPPLIED INFO ********** Dear Joh
n: The fastest recorded speed I've heard of for a Peregrine Falcon is 242 miles per hour. A skydiver/falconer, Ken Franklin, trained his peregrine to stoop after him while he was skydiving. He would toss the bird out of a small aircraft and then jump out of the plane. The falcon would dive down aft
er him as he threw out a leather lure. Franklin modified a Pro-Track recording altimeter (the kind skydivers wear on their wrists) and attached it to the bird's tail feathers. This gave him an accurate reading of the descent speed of the falcon in a vertical dive. National Geographic filmed a telev
ision segment about this several years ago. Below is a link to a recent article about Franklin and his falcon. Best regards, Tim Gallagher Referenced Brochure: www.dassaultfalcon.com/whatsnew/falconer_article.jsp?DOCNUM=56327 &IDOCNUM=56326
---------------------------- ---------------------------- Dear Tim, Thanks for your quick reply. I'll add that to the website. My only question is whether Peregrine Falcons' stoop speed with a skydiver is anywhere close to the stoop speed when going after prey; the Swiss noted the maximum sto
op angle they measured was about 40 degrees, not the straight-down angle of a skydiver. I doubt Peregrine Falcons ever dive after prey straight down. Do they? It seems unlikely since the timing to intersect horizontally-traveling prey would be much more difficult from 90 degrees than from a lesse
r angle. I'll email the skydiver about this. Thanks very much for your reply, John ---------------------------- ---------------------------- [Dear John,] That's a difficult question to answer. I think what Franklin has proven is that these birds are capable of stooping at these speeds. No one be
fore had ever established that in a verifiable way. Whether they can strike prey at that speed is another matter. It may be that they use extremely high speeds to catch up to prey but slow down somewhat before striking it. As for the angle of the stoop, I have definitely seen peregrines knock down
prey in stoops that, to my eye, were perfectly vertical (this seems more common with males), but the majority of stoops are certainly done at a lesser angle than 90 degrees. In fact, many peregrines will deliberately stoop behind their prey, going below it and then swooping up (using the momentum fr
om the stoop) to hit or bind to it on the upswing. [-Tim]


Tags for this video: falcon peregrine rescue

Find more videos in the "Animals" category
See more videos uploaded by generatech

Related Videos
Derby Peregrine Falcon 3 - A Bit Of A ScrapePeregrine Falcon - HayabusaDerby Peregrine Falcon 2 - first footage
derby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.htmlderby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.htmlderby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.html
Peregrine FalconPeregrine Falcons in the NetherlandsMVC Ecplores the Peregrine Falcon
derby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.htmlderby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.htmlderby-peregrine-falcon-3-a-bit-of-a-scrape.html


Share This Video:       StumbleUpon       del.icio.us       Reddit       digg       Furl       Spurl       Simpy       YahooMyWeb


Comments for this video: Show || Hide
Comments for this video on YouTube
they recorded a ... ( 4 months ago by NLhunt3r)
they recorded a speed of 360 km p/h in germany
very very ... ( 4 months ago by inmayakul)
very very impressive info section: hats off to the amount of research and follow-up you did on this.
You can't put a ... ( 4 months ago by werle00)
You can't put a hood on an untrained bird.
They were holding it correctly so that it could not hurt itself, or them.
Array ( 4 months ago by flipperisgay)
LOL !
I have been flying raptors for over 10 years and EVERY FRESH TRAPPED BIRD is hooded. They they take the hood and calm down instantly.
I've been handling ... ( 4 months ago by werle00)
I've been handling for 7 years.
We never put hoods on them. We use pillow cases or towels to cover their faces.
I have no comment to YOUR method, but that is the method I was trained under.
Having a hood is a ... ( 4 months ago by flipperisgay)
Having a hood is a faster and smoother and safer way to calm the bird down. Having the bird hooded you can check its beak, cere as well as crop tubing it if needed. With a pillow case or blanket or sheet you add way more stress as well as the possiblility to over heat the bird. Plus adds to clumsyness of handling of the bird adding stress to a bird . Hoods have been used for THOUSANDS of years as a simple and safe way to control and keep raptors calm and has been proven very successful.
I know there are ... ( 4 months ago by Jonathan526)
I know there are plenty of decent, well informed, and otherwise well intentioned rehabbers but, most prolong suffering through mishandling and mismanagement. They seem to do a pretty good job in this video, kudos to them.
I find this to be ... ( 4 months ago by flipperisgay)
I find this to be true as well. I help rehabbers from time to time. This would be in handling and educating them on how to handle and "feed" these birds.
I have also seen very "respected" rehabbers keeping birds for pure personal gain. One has a awesome gyr falcon that can fly and care for its self. She has had it for 7 years now why not release I ask. She say's it draws a crowd which pays for everything. I ask what about thousands of dollars of donations ? Where does it all go?
THOSE DARN ... ( 3 months ago by bcmagician)
THOSE DARN MURDEROUS CROWS LMAO
Thank you for ... ( 3 months ago by MyWildlifeVideos)
Thank you for posting this excellent video. Those who find a wild bird in trouble should immediately contact the nearest wildlife center. This falcon appears severely hydrated, hence the IV. I hope she recovered and was released back into the wild. International Bird Rescue Research Center (Cordelia & San Pedro, California) rescues & rehabs mostly aquatic birds. Five Stars!
This bird is ... ( 1 month ago by 1DucatiMan)
This bird is delivering a message to you. This experience is significant of your receiving a message from the heavens. This Falcon Totem is powerful and magical.
I DO NOT BELEIVE ... ( 1 month ago by NordicHealer)
I DO NOT BELEIVE you should be giving this Tiercel an IV thats BS. IV's can so easily cause INFECTIONS...look at the problems humans have with IV's. I had one that had not completely healed up 6 months later! Too much tampering with nature in my opinion and I am a falcon expert.
be realistic ... ( 1 month ago by TheTemplar18)
be realistic according to wat they said the falcon is dehydrated thus meaning that it can die if not cared for. i would rather see him sick for 6 months than dead. wouldn't u ?
I happen to also be ... ( 1 month ago by NordicHealer)
I happen to also be a Doctor and I feel the call for an IV was Not in the best interest of the bird. For example in what way was it determined the bird was Dehydrated? Sticking needles into a wild bird can also easily cause them to go into Shock and Hyper Ventilation and Cardic arrest. The bird sought refuge on the landing atop the stairs, and was regrouping from his apparent ordeal with some crows (nothing uncommon about that either) and would have probably been fine left totally alone.
lol the guy in the ... ( 1 month ago by davidhariri)
lol the guy in the room is so annoying with all the questions and spilling water all over everyone. Wow. i would hate to be in there with that guy trying to save a birds life and having him being like how old are birds like this? Lol there as old as they are you idiot thats like asking how old all the humans in the world are.
I'm glad you have a ... ( 1 month ago by generatech)
I'm glad you have a sense of humor about that. You are the first person to comment about it, yet I also was annoyed by his questions; he was tagging along with the rescuers (he's a friend of theirs apparently). I asked him to be quiet so they could focus on inserting the IV. He kicked the water over, too, with he's enormous black combat boots, plus he was wearing black-dark sunglasses at night (maybe for an eye condition). I should have put him the video.
haha you totally ... ( 1 month ago by davidhariri)
haha you totally should have.
oh my god thats so ... ( 1 month ago by davidhariri)
oh my god thats so cool i'm a falcon expert too, hell for all your dumbass head knows we're all falcon experts! WOOHOO
i do agree on u on ... ( 1 month ago by TheTemplar18)
i do agree on u on that part. im studying biliogy im still in college. but i love falcons and i would rather see them alive then dead idk wat they do as long as it gets better and starts flying again.
there not ... ( 1 month ago by Me4prez)
there not endaaRgerd!!! There Listed as L.C Meaning Least Concerned
anyone know where ... ( 4 weeks ago by crg19)
anyone know where this bird actually came from? Isnt it kind of rare to be able to identify them via tags when they are still alive? Ive heard in many cases the time when tags are read is when the bird dies and someone finds it. Where did 19R come from?
Array ( 1 week ago by poppapump444)
hawk eats falcon
click my videos
Well, banding still ... ( 1 week ago by oneworldguy)
Well, banding still occurs in many places. For example, Mariah and Kaver are incredibly prolific peregrines because they have ayases every year on top of the world headquarters of Kodak. Google search "Kodak Falcons" and you'll eventually find a site that shows their nesting box with cams all around inside and out so viewers can watch. Their babies are banded (tagged) every year and they've been tracked as far as Toronto and even Detroit.
Thank you for ... ( 5 days ago by Spiritspast)
Thank you for posting this, I work with Birds of Prey in CA and love seeing people helping these beautiful birds, the fact that he showed up on your door step...he chose you to help him. Blessings.



Tell a friend:


URL 
Embed Code