Tributes are pouring in as New Yorkers say goodbye to Pale Male, a red-tailed hawk with a claim to being the city's original celebrity bird. The Central Park luminary was pronounced dead, 30 years after he first settled in Manhattan's ritzy Fifth Avenue. His nest remains at 927 Fifth Avenue.
The New York City Audubon non-profit said he had "brought joy to so many". He "taught New Yorkers that you didn't need to go to a national park to watch nature", one wildlife chronicler wrote. Pale Male has been the subject of an award-winning documentary, a television special, at least three books and hundreds of newspaper articles. Red-tailed hawks have an average life span of about 20 years. Pale Male never wore an identification tag and at the time of his death, he was more than 32 years old.
Much has been written since then about the iconic hawk, as well as the procession of partners he outlived, and offspring so numerous one naturalist described it to the New York Times as "Shakespearean levels of progeny". "He lived at least 30 years in a challenging environment that NYC poses and there will never be another hawk as well known and loved as he was," wildlife rehabilitation expert Bobby Horvath wrote on Facebook. Horvath, who revealed the bird had died in his care, said blood results revealed "severe renal failure" that was "beyond treating or reversing". "Hopefully it was simply age related issues and it was just his time after an amazing unmatchable lifespan," he said.
Bruce Yolton, an urban hawk photographer, wrote that Pale Male's "biggest legacy is that he taught New Yorkers, that despite man's efforts to control the landscape of the city, nature still thrives here and needs to be respected and nurtured". "Pale Male inspired hundreds of New Yorker's to become conservationists, and to work to protect wildlife not only in rural areas, but in their own zip codes," he added.
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