Despite its manicured gardens and bruising security detail, the White House is wilder than you鈥檇 think. Over the centuries it has served as the temporary residence of not just every president since John Adams (the Clinton years were especially untamed) but also birds, racoons, and even a rogue fox.
The latest visitor? .
The young raptor has been exploring the VIP territory over the last few days, and has opted for the comfortable ledges of the building鈥檚 East Wing, which suit its species鈥 penchant for high roosting places that oversee open swathes of land for hunting. The hawk was probably attracted by the relative lushness of the White House compared with the rest of D.C.; a thriving population of gray squirrels on the grounds likely sealed the deal, . (In fact, the bird has caused quite a stir already by publicly and voraciously feasting on one unlucky rodent in the Presidential driveway,.)
In announcing the news of its new resident, the White House also took the opportunity to highlight more sobering information about birds, drawn from . 鈥淥ne recent study notes that by the year 2080, around half of the bird species in the United States could lose more than 50 percent of their current range due largely to the effects of climate change,鈥 the . Published late last year, the report found that 314 species of North American birds are climate-threatened or climate-endangered. Habitat fragmentation and shifting ranges could push some species into urban environments they typically wouldn鈥檛 choose.
Luckily, Red-tailed Hawks are not only the , they may also be one of the rare beneficiaries of climate change: Their range is most likely to expand or stay the same in decades to come. The birds are already comfortably spending months in the city, and increasingly, are even starting to , too. Some of them just have grander tastes in real estate.
Update: The White House hawk is now sporting a new moniker鈥攍ast week, he was named from New Hampshire. The class was selected for the honor after making with an unsuccessful attempt to get their state senate to name the Red-tailed Hawk the state's official raptor.
The good news is you can now .