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Arches National Park
Peregrine Falcons
 
Peregrine Falcon
Photo © Gary Hartley
Peregrine Falcon
Peregrine Falcon
Photo © Gary Hartley
Peregrine Falcon


The Peregrine Falcon has the most extensive distribution of any bird in the world. The American peregrine falcon is found in Arches, typically nesting in shallow caves high on cliff walls along the Colorado River. Their diet consists almost exclusively of birds, and the sound created as they attack their prey can be startling. In a dive, peregrines may attain speeds exceeding 200 miles an hour, making them without a doubt the fastest bird.

From 1940 through the early 1970s, the use of DDT as a pesticide caused a precipitous decline in the peregrine population. This chemical agent caused eggshell thinning and breakage, and in some areas successful reproduction stopped altogether. The peregrine was listed as a federally endangered species in 1973.

Restrictions on DDT pesticides and coordinated recovery efforts have led to a remarkable comeback. From a low of about 324 nesting pairs in the U.S. and Canada in 1975, roughly 1,650 nesting pairs were counted in 1999. In 1999, the American peregrine falcon was removed from the endangered species list, though the species is not fully recovered throughout its range; rather, it is “no longer threatened with extinction in the foreseeable future.” Peregrines are still on the state endangered species list in Utah, but the species is fairly common in the canyons of southeast Utah.

In 1989, the National Park Service began a three-year program to determine peregrine populations in western parks. Arches continues to monitor peregrines today, and one pair is known to nest in the park.

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Our bookstore contains many titles about the natural history of this area.
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Scientific Research
Scientific Research
Scientists from all over the world study in Arches
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Ed Abbey

Did You Know?
Edward Abbey worked as a seasonal park ranger at Arches in the late 1950s. His 1968 memoir of this experience, "Desert Solitaire," has become a classic of desert literature.

Last Updated: November 28, 2011 at 09:07 MST