Mississippi Kite
Ictinia mississippiensis
Mississippi Kite (Ictinia mississippiensis) is a diurnal raptor of open country, forest edges, wetlands, migration corridors, or working landscapes across its range. Field identification usually centers on wing shape, tail pattern, eye line, underwing contrast, and light, dark, or rufous plumage phases when present. It feeds on fish, mammals, birds, reptiles, insects, or carrion according to species and season, and many individuals move long distances during migration.
In wildlife records, this label keeps Mississippi kite separate from broader catch-all categories and from domestic look-alikes. Track source, locality, life stage, permits when relevant, health findings, and the observed color form rather than forcing a generic entry; that keeps releases, transfers, husbandry notes, and future image prompts auditable for Mississippi Kite.
Colors: Black, Gray, Pale Juvenile, Wild Type