Charles Barnes, age 15, of Phoenix, Ariz
Is the turkey buzzard the turkey vulture?
The lordly eagle is classified as a falconiforme bird, a name which points up the features he has in common with the falcon This outstanding order of birds also includes the hawks and the owls, the kites and the kestrels, the big condors and the vultures: These aces of the air differ from the fluttering songbirds as greatly as the lion differs from the lamb
All the falconiformes are meat‑eaters for which they are fitted with bills like scimitars Some have talons for patching live meat, others do not All are masters of flight Some wheel aloft without effort on soaring pinions Some swoop silently through the night The large falconiforme order is subdivided into families according to features The eagle and the hawk families are birds of prey which devour fresh meat
The vulture family is named Cathartidae ‑ a word which means, of all things, the cleansers They are the cleaner‑uppers of the woods and the fields, the high elopes and the prairies Their thankless task is to devour the dead bodies of mice and the corpses of larger animals that litter the landscape We pall them scavengers and carrion‑eaters and we often forget the valuable garbage collecting they do They must eat what they find on the ground, for they lack the talons necessary for catching and clawing live prey
Various vulture squads patrol the plains of Africa, Asia and parts of Europe The native vultures of North America include the big, gaudy condor and the smaller black vulture But our moat common flying garbage man is the turkey vulture, alias the turkey buzzard The word buzzard is twisted from bustard, the name of a big bird of the stork clan, and our turkey buzzard has a turkey‑red head
Regardless of names, he is not related to the true buzzard or to the Thanksgiving turkey
In the past, turkey‑buzzard‑vulture rarely strayed north of the Mason‑Dixon line But the world climates grows warmer and, along with other animals, he is extending his range, In the past 15 years, his clean‑up squads have been seen patrolling the fields and green hills of Massachusetts
Seen close‑up, the turkey buzzard is far from attractive and his carrion diet gives him a foul odor He has a scrawny bare neck and head and his coarse, black feathers have an oily gleam He is less than a yard long and weighs less than three pounds But his slender wings spread three feet wide
In flight he is magnificent to see, He soars and wheels with the fingery feathers of his wings tipped upwards, He senses from afar the corpse of the smallest mouse and swoops down to do his duty If the corpse is large, other members of the garbage squad wheel in from afar to help clean up the carrion.