Nick,

I went to CBC data for Colorado to see what it says.  From the early 1990s up 
through about 2005 or 2006 both Sharp-shinned and Cooper’s Hawk numbers 
increased steadily: up  125% for Sharp-shinned and 135% for Coopers.  Since 
then, however, Sharp-shinned have gone back to about where they were while 
Coopers have doubled again.  During the period from the 91st CBC (which if I 
recall means the actual end year is one before, so 1989-90) to the 105th CBC, 
Cooper’s numbers grew fairly steadily from just under .01 per party hour to 
just over .02. in 15 years.  But then things really took off, for every year 
since count number 106, Cooper’s Hawk counts have been between .03 and .04 with 
a high of .0418 on the 111th count.

What about Eurasian Collared-Doves?  Their numbers have grown 12 fold in the 
last decade.  My conclusion is that Cooper’s Hawks are an even greater 
beneficiary of all of that food source that is now available and they are 
prospering.  But, more Cooper’s Hawks might mean fewer Sharp-shinned Hawks.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Nick Komar
Sent: Friday, February 27, 2015 10:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: cobirds
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Boulder surprising hawk kill

Sharpies take Eurasian Collared-Doves on a regular basis. The dove is almost 
50% larger than the hawk by mass. This brings up a question: why are there not 
more Sharp-shinned Hawks around? There must be more influential constraints on 
the hawks population than winter food supply. Any thoughts on what those 
constraints might be?

Nick Komar
Fort Collins CO

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 27, 2015, at 9:29 AM, David Waltman 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

I just witnessed a Sharp-shinned Hawk successfully kill a Steller's Jay.  It's 
sitting on the ground eating the jay right now.  The Steller's Jay is about the 
same size as the hawk, although the Sharp-shinned would outweigh the jay at 
about 5 oz. vs.3.7 oz.  I'm amazed that a Sharp-shinned Hawk would go for a 
bird that large.
David Waltman
Boulder County foothills, 1/2 between Boulder and Lyons
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