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A University of Tennessee researcher documented an immature Cooper's hawk using vehicle traffic and pedestrian signal ...
A young Cooper’s hawk is feathered, but still could have some “fluffy white down sticking out between their feathers,” Game and Fish said. They’re able to run in a forward bent position ...
A young Cooper’s hawk in New Jersey learned to use pedestrian crossing signals, specifically their sounds, as cues to time ...
A hawk in New Jersey has adapted to city life. It uses traffic signals to hunt birds. The hawk waits for the pedestrian ...
A hawk in New Jersey learned to navigate the signals at an intersection in order to ambush its prey. Zoologist Vladimir ...
Researcher Vladimir Dinets watched the bird repeatedly sneak behind a row of cars to ambush its unsuspecting prey ...
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One winter morning in suburban New Jersey, Vladimir Dinets stopped at a red light — and saw something he couldn’t believe.
A hawk in a New Jersey town has learned to use a neighborhood street light to hunt more effectively, a new study has found. The study published on Thursday in Fronters of Ethology ...
The Cooper’s hawk Dinets spotted on his commute was, in that sense at least, not unusual. But it was the particular technique ...
The bird—a young Cooper’s hawk, to be exact—wasn’t using the crosswalk, in the sense of treading on the painted white stripes ...
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