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The nest is a shallow bowl made mostly of small twigs and lined with grass, hay, or leaves. Nests measure about 21 inches across, with a cup that's about 7 inches across and 4 inches deep.
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During the nonbreeding season, the White-tailed Kite roosts communally. Sometimes more than 100 individuals pile into a few trees or tall shrubs at the edge of ...
Nest site is in top of tree, usually 20-50' above ground, sometimes higher or lower depending on available sites. Live-oak often chosen as nest site. Nest ( ...
The nest is made from small sticks and twigs, and lined with grass, weed or straw type material (3), and construction takes between seven (3) and twenty-eight ...
White-tailed Kites build their nests in the fork of a tree or bush. The nest is cup-shaped and made of small- to medium-sized sticks. The nest is often lined ...
Pairs have nested in several locations and there are occasionally winter communal roosts in the forests of Upper Campus.
Nesting and copulation have been recorded between January and September. Range eggs per season: 3 to 6. Average eggs per season: 4. Range time to hatching ...
Nest placed near top of dense oak, willow, or other tree stand; usually 6-20 m. (20-100 ft) above ground (Dixon et al. 1957). Nest located near open foraging ...
Nest building starts in January. They nest in the top of a tree, usually 20-50 feet off the ground.
White-tailed Kites have a relatively small range in the U.S., only occurring in Texas and along the Pacific Coast up to Oregon. They are seen in southeast Texas ...