136
CRESTED EAGLE Morphnus guianensis 71–87cm, WS 152–185cm. This very
large eagle is a very rarely encountered bird of humid forest and edge. Hunts
from canopy and subcanopy perches, preying on mammals and larger birds.
Rarely soars and hence overlooked easily. Most likely to be seen perched along
waterways or sunning itself in early–mid morning on emergent canopy snags;
can be confiding. Cf. larger, bulkier, and more powerful Harpy Eagle, which
has shaggier, forked crest. Hawk-Eagles are appreciably smaller, with different
plumage patterns, feathered legs, staring golden-yellow eyes (eyes brown to dull
yellowish on Crested Eagle). Adult Crested variable, typically has pale rusty to
blackish barring on underparts; exceptionally all-dark below. Attains adult plumage in about 3 years.
SOUNDS: Perched adult has short series of full-bodied, slightly overslurred whistles, introduced by 1–2
shorter notes, whi whi wheeéooo wheeéooo wheeéooo; longer, at times persistent series of short overslurred
whistles, whi wheée wheée wheée...; and plaintive, slightly rising, clear-toned whistle, 1–1.5 sec, higher, less
mournful than Harpy Eagle. STATUS: Very rare and local (mostly extirpated by deforestation and hunting)
on n. Caribbean slope (mainly Tortuguero area) and s. Pacific slope, to 1000m. (Mexico to S America.)
HARPY EAGLE Harpia harpyja 87–107cm, WS 183–224cm. This huge power
ful eagle is a very rarely encountered bird of humid lowland forest and edge.
Hunts from canopy and subcanopy perches, preying on mammals and larger
birds. Does not soar and hence overlooked easily—in our experience, you have
much more chance of seeing a jaguar. Most likely to be seen perched along
waterways or sunning itself in early–mid morning on emergent canopy snags;
can be confiding. Flights mainly short and low over canopy or across rivers.
Only possible confusion species is slightly smaller and equally rare Crested
Eagle. Crested is less heavily built (but can still appear huge), overall slimmer
and longer-tailed. Crested has smaller bill, less massive legs, and erectile crest is single-pointed. In flight,
Crested shows heavier dark barring across secondaries and inner primaries; adult Crested has gray hood
(without Harpy’s black chest patch) and unmarked whitish underwing coverts. Harpy also has broader
tail banding relative to similar-age Crested, and attains adult plumage in about 4 years. SOUNDS: Mainly
vocal around nest. Adult gives mournful, slurred wailing whistles, 1–1.5 secs; imm. has higher, shriller,
drawn-out whistles. STATUS: Very rare and local (mostly extirpated by deforestation and hunting) on n.
Caribbean slope and s. Pacific slope, to 500m. (Mexico to S America.)