Lanner Falcon (Falco biarmicus)
The Lanner Falcons (Falco biarmicus) is a large bird of prey that breeds in Africa, southeast Europe, and just into Asia. It is mainly resident, but some birds disperse more widely after the breeding season.
In the wild Lanner Falcon numbers are somewhat declining in Europe, though the species remains relatively common in parts of Africa.
The Lanner Falcon is a bird of open country and savanna.
Description
It is a large falcon, 43-50cm in length with a wingspan of 95-105cm.
European Lanner Falcons (Falco biarmicus feldeggi, also called Feldegg’s Falcon) have slate grey or brown-grey upper parts; most African subspecies are a paler blue-grey above. The breast is streaked in northern birds, resembling greyish Saker Falcons, but the Lanner has a reddish back to the head.
Males and females look alike, but the browner young birds resemble Saker Falcons even more. However, Sakers have a lighter top of the head and less clear head-side patterns.
Calls / Vocalizations
The Lanner’s call is a harsh “wray-e“.
Feeding / Hunting
It usually hunts by horizontal pursuit, rather than the Peregrine’s stoop from a height, and takes mainly bird prey in flight.
Breeding / Nesting
It lays 3-4 eggs on a cliff ledge nest, or occasionally in an old stick nest in a tree.
Falconry
Lanner Falcon males are called lannerets in falconry, where the species is sometimes used as a ‘first falcon’ by less-experienced falconers. Displaying a good nature sometimes lacking in more highly powered birds, what Lanners lack in hunting prowess they more than make up for in personality.
Outstandingly maneuverable, they use their large tails and relatively low wing loading to perform exceptionally to the lure and can take a range of small birds as prey.
One of the few raptors to attack prey head-on at times, their tactics of ambush and surprise make them entertaining birds for crowds to enjoy.
They are bred in captivity for falconry; hybrids with the Peregrine Falcon (“perilanners”) are also often seen. Merret (1666) claimed that the “lanar” lived in Sherwood Forest and the Forest of Dean in England; such populations would seem to derive from escaped hunting birds of the nobility.
Miscellaneous
This is presumably the oldest living hierofalcon species. Support for this assumption comes mainly from biogeography agreeing better with the confusing pattern of DNA sequence data in this case than in others.
Nonetheless, there is rampant hybridization (see also Perilanner) and incomplete lineage sorting which confounds the data to a massive extent; molecular studies with small sample sizes can simply not be expected to yield reliable conclusions in the entire hierofalcon group.
In any case, the radiation of the entire living diversity of hierofalcons seems to have taken place in the Eemian interglacial at the start of the Late Pleistocene, a mere 130,000-115,000 years ago; the Lanner Falcons would thus represent the lineage that became isolated in sub-Saharan Africa at some time during the Riss glaciation (200,000 to 130,000 years ago) already.
The Birds of Prey … Falcon Information … The Sport of Falconry
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