Watching other nest cams of various eagles, hawks, falcons, kestrels and buzzards, I've seen parent birds bring in chicks to feed their own chicks. So it's no surprise to see this drama unfold...every birdie gotta eat!
@@ndjibukabengele973Hawks have existed for what 10 million years and we've been around like 300,000. They know better than us what to do. What it was probably doing was ensuring it survival over its kids so it could then successfully procreate future children
Wow. Both of these predators attack my pigeons. And then the hawk showed who is the boss in the forest. There is no predator more agile and maneuverable than a Goshawk
@@rookiefishing9753faster in open air. he is taliking about agility and maneuverability. those are charachteristics of forest raptors like the goshawk. not open air raptors
@@yayocowboy The goshawks smaller relatives like Cooper’s hawks, sharp shinned hawks, and sparrowhawks are definitely more agile because they have the same body plan yet are smaller.
@@yayocowboy True. There is always a trade-off, with maneuverability and speed versus power and gripping strength; of course, a female goshawk is out classed in power by other larger forest Raptors, like crowned Eagles, Mountain Hawk Eagles, harpy eagles, and other similar species.
Thank God that he created me as a human if he created me a fish id wanna be a orca if he created me a cat id wanna be a lion and if he created me a bird...id wanna be a goshawk....
Or a bald eagle. I don't think I've seen a Goshawk manage to take a bald eagle chick, but I've seen alot of bald eagle nests where they dine on hawklets.
And humans kill other humans for fun or hate, so no thanks to God nothing! What r u talkin abt?!?! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤦🏼♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🤷♂️🙄🙄🙄
@@sardu55 Wrong they are good at both, but the main difference is eagles learn from every encounter and that's why they are much intelligent than you think. There is also studies on this online. If an eagle nest is attacked by a particular bird for example in this video the gohawk attacked it's nest and successfully killed the chicks...In the second encounter she will more careful and learn their pattern of attacks..The eagle in this video is surely a young female, whose nest is getting attacked first time by gohawks...In the 2nd encounter she won't repeat those mistakes again..
It is true that the goshawk is smaller then osprey and most eagles found in its range. However, this is a booted eagle which is hawk sized. 40 cm long with a 130 cm wingspan. Found throughout Africa, southern Europe into central Asia.
As I perceived it the eagle chased the hawk away, but the hawk immediately came back around and took the eaglet. And keep in mind the eagle is a booted eagle about the same size as the goshawk. The goshawk is known for very aggressive predatory behavior. Your chicken hawk label is misplaced.
As this video demonstrates, hawks and falcons of all differing sizes and capabilities are nonetheless formidable predators - they are certainly not pushovers or anything because they’re smaller.
Goshawks are a lot more aggressive in their nest defense than are most other Raptors. The booted Eagle also doesn’t have the luxury of the speed or explosiveness, nor the agility of accipiters , so it would be a very silly gamble to attack a goshawk nest for a booted Eagle
Most are quick to cite "instincts" when they can't explain behavior. These are terrible instincts by the parents. No father nearby to protect the nest. Nesting in a location of known activity.
Females defend the nest (she is bigger) when the chicks are this small. Male defends the territory and provides food for all. Very few raptors will be able to successfully defend against a goshawk attack ( Goshawk reactions, agility, speed and just the way they process information makes them deadly). Even with the father present ( he could be nearby for all you know) the outcome would be the same.
The other bird is a genius. It swoops by to piss the eagle off. The eagle then chases after the other bird then the other bird swoops back around and grabs the chick. Easy pickings!
I'm not sure what happened there. It looked like the eagle, probably the female, saw the goshawk come near the nest and she drove it off. But the goshawk immediately came back and took the eaglet.
Yep that is what happened; the eagle saw the goshawk and chased it off, but the goshawk quickly doubled back to attack one of the eaglets now that the nest was left open.
Eagle dad, did I tell you not to leave the house? Eagle mom, but, but..eagle dad, butt, butt, my butt. Eagle mom knows exactly what she is going to do, Goshawk knows exactly what she is going to do too, just one step ahead.
04:25 - 04:35 Booted eagle- dificult breeding, because all extreme aereal birds deal poorly with the closed spaces that hide the nest. Goshawk-dificult wintering, because they do not migrate, they have no efficient wings for long distances.
In my country, Asian Banded Goshawk(Shikra) from India Subcontinent joining a migrations alongside with others raptor from Eurasian, North Eastern Asian and they transit to my country in the middle of Southeast Asia before continue to the next destination.