@KarenL: Thanks, Karen, for the scientific name. My internet connection is very slow here and I have a problem searching for info. @Maria dB: Yes, it is captive and a resident of a nearby snake farm. I have another spotting here of lizard buzzards in the wild but the shots were not very close.
Hi Jinky, where you know the species please take a moment to look up & add the scientific name, which in this case is Kaupifalco monogrammicus. This article explains why this is important to us - http://blog.projectnoah.org/post/2870249...
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@KarenL: Thanks, Karen, for the scientific name. My internet connection is very slow here and I have a problem searching for info.
@Maria dB: Yes, it is captive and a resident of a nearby snake farm. I have another spotting here of lizard buzzards in the wild but the shots were not very close.
Wow! What a cool bird! We've found one on the road!but I wish the one we found was alive and friendly,though
Hi Jinky, where you know the species please take a moment to look up & add the scientific name, which in this case is Kaupifalco monogrammicus. This article explains why this is important to us - http://blog.projectnoah.org/post/2870249...
Wow - how did you get such close-up shots? Was it a captive bird?