Juvenile Cooper's Hawk, Woodlands Cemetery, Philadelphia in album birds

In Albums: nature birds Philadelphia

A juvenile cooper's hawk, showing brown streaks on pale breast, yellow eye, and long, gray striped tail, against a leafy background.

Jul 16th, 2012, by Alex Zorach

This photo shows a juvenile cooper's hawk, sighted July 18th, 2012, in Woodlands Cemetery in West Philadelphia, in a group of 4 hawks, presumably a family unit. I found this bird hard to identify, but this close-up photo helped immensely. Juvenile hawks can be tricky because juvenile plumages are more similar to each other, and birders usually encounter fewer juvenile birds. From a distance, the bird's chunky shape and dark brown back led me to falsely think at first that this bird was a buteo, such as a Red-shouldered Hawk. This was further confounded by the fact that the bird's calls sounded more similar to the vocalizations of the Red-shouldered hawk than to the vocalizations of adult Cooper's hawks, which I am more familiar with.

The main possible species of confusion, in my case, was a juvenile Red-shouldered hawk.

To identify this bird, note: