Better Know a Bird: How Harris鈥檚 Hawks Hunt Like Wolves to Bring Down Prey

Teaming up helps these agile raptors take on animals twice their size. But we鈥檙e still not sure why they stand on each other.

For a desert rabbit, it鈥檚 hard to imagine what could be more terrifying than a hungry, nimble Harris鈥檚 Hawk. Except, that is, for five hungry, nimble Harris鈥檚 Hawks.

We tend to think of raptors as solitary hunters, and for the most part that鈥檚 true. Unfortunately for the cottontails and jackrabbits of the American Southwest, however, Harris鈥檚 Hawks hunt in packs, like wolves with wings.

They aren鈥檛 the only birds of prey known to team up. Aplomado Falcons sometimes hunt in pairs, as do Peregrine Falcons and Golden Eagles. But none of these raptors match the Harris鈥檚 when it comes to coordinating a kill. 鈥淭hey have the most sophisticated cooperation that has been documented to date,鈥 says James Bednarz, an avian ecologist at the University of North Texas who has authored several papers on the species.

Bednarz spent the 1980s studying Harris鈥檚 Hawks in the New Mexico desert, applying scientific rigor to earlier reports that the birds are communal hunters. He and a research assistant fitted about 40 hawks with radio transmitters to track their movements. Then, for hundreds of hours, they stood on a pickup truck bed and observed them through a spotting scope. Before long it became clear that the birds鈥攚hich lived together, most often in groups of five鈥攚ere indeed cooperating in complex ways to bring down prey.

At daybreak, the hawks gather, often all on a single branch, cactus, or utility pole, in what Bednarz calls an assembly ceremony. They then split up into two groups. One group flies perhaps 200 meters to a new perch and scans for prey. A few moments later, the other group flies past, finding its own lookout point. They carry on this way, methodically leap-frogging one another, with each group watching the other closely. Eventually one team spots prey, signals to the others鈥斺淭hey might go horizontal and start bobbing their heads,鈥 Bednarz says鈥攁nd the groups converge. The hunt is on.

鈥淚t knocked our socks off when we started making these observations,鈥 Bednarz says. 鈥淲e鈥檇 watch a group make a kill and we鈥檇 just look at each other: Did you see what I saw?鈥

What they saw was an arsenal of hunting methods that Bednarz boiled down to three main tactics. In what he dubbed the surprise pounce, the whole group converges on the rabbit from various angles so that if one misses, others surprise it from a different direction. From a pickup-bed lookout hundreds of meters away, 鈥淵ou see them bouncing up and down like they鈥檙e bouncing on trampolines,鈥 he says.

When a rabbit finds shelter in a thicket, the hawks turn to what Bednarz calls the flush and ambush. One or two birds plunge into the brush far enough to scare the unfortunate critter out of its hiding spot and into the waiting talons of other hawks perched nearby.

鈥淭he most spectacular was the relay attack,鈥 Bednarz says. That鈥檚 when one hawk dives down between the rabbit and a patch of cover, forcing the rabbit to keep running. The next hawk blocks its escape into the next hideout, extending the chase. After diving down, each hawk gets back into the chase, taking turns as leader and keeping the rabbit on the run. 鈥淭his whole process would continue for over a half-mile,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hey just kept the rabbit running constantly until it was exhausted and, via fatigue or making a mistake, it showed its back to one of the members and they made the kill.鈥

Their taste for cooperation makes Harris鈥檚 Hawks popular among falconers, says Jennifer Coulson, who with her husband, Tom, wrote. 鈥淣ot only does that mean they will hunt in a group and hunt with other Harris鈥檚 Hawks, but it also means they have a special connection with the falconer,鈥 says Coulson, president of the in Louisiana and an adjunct instructor at Tulane University. 鈥淭hey understand more than most birds of prey that you鈥檙e working for them and with them.鈥

While Coulson thinks the challenge of navigating rugged habitat Harris's Hawks hunt together, Bednarz believes the bigger factor is their need to take down large and powerful prey. In parts of their range, small prey is scarce in winter. Rabbits are available year-round, but they鈥檙e risky targets. A typical adult jackrabbit weighs more than twice as much as a female Harris鈥檚 Hawk, and more than three times as much as a male, Bednarz. A kick from their powerful legs can easily break a hawk鈥檚 ribs. (One of Coulson鈥檚 largest female Harris鈥檚 Hawks died from just such a kick.) Together, the birds have the strength to overwhelm the rabbit, and its meat provides plenty of calories to go around. In warmer months, with easier prey like lizards, migratory birds, and baby rabbits available, the birds are more likely to hunt alone or in smaller groups, he says.

The birds not only hunt together, but also nest in groups. A pair鈥檚 offspring will often hang around for up to three years, and unrelated Harris鈥檚 Hawks sometimes also join the group and assist with raising young. Bednarz believes the advantages of group hunting explain their collective nesting behavior; the bonds and cooperation that arise among these units during the breeding season enable them to hunt effectively in winter. He鈥檚 now studying the DNA of hawk groups to better understand their social dynamics.

One striking way those dynamics play out is through a behavior called back-standing. It鈥檚 just what it sounds like: One bird lands on another鈥檚 back, and stands there for anything from a few seconds to nearly 20 minutes. 鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 several birds stacked up in totem-pole style,鈥 Coulson says. In fact, she鈥檚 read a report of a stack five hawks high.

The behavior seems to be unrelated to mating. Some observers believe it has to do with one bird wanting the other鈥檚 perch. Others think the top bird provides shade for the others. But the fact is, like much else about this fascinating bird, back-standing remains a mystery, Bednarz says. 

鈥淚t happens. It鈥檚 a really interesting behavior. We don鈥檛 know why.鈥