The common buzzard is a generalist predator which hunts a wide variety of prey given the opportunity. Their prey spectrum extents to a wide variety of vertebrates including
mammals,
birds (from any age from eggs to adult birds),
reptiles,
amphibians and, rarely,
fish, as well as to various
invertebrates, mostly
insects. Young animals are often attacked, largely the
nidifugous young of various vertebrates. In total well over 300 prey species are known to be taken by common buzzards. Furthermore, prey size can vary from tiny
beetles,
caterpillars and
ants to large adult
grouse and
rabbits up to nearly twice their body mass. Mean body mass of vertebrate prey was estimated at in
Belarus. At times, they will also subsist partially on carrion, usually of dead mammals or fish. Hunting in relatively open areas has been found to increase hunting success whereas more complete shrub cover lowered success. A majority of prey is taken by dropping from perch, and is normally taken on ground. Alternately, prey may be hunted in a low flight. This species tends not to hunt in a spectacular stoop but generally drops gently then gradually accelerate at bottom with wings held above the back. Sometimes, the buzzard also forages by random glides or soars over open country, wood edges or clearings. Perch hunting may be done preferentially but buzzards fairly regularly also hunt from a ground position when the habitat demands it. Outside the breeding season, as many 15–30 buzzards have been recorded foraging on ground in a single large field, especially juveniles. Normally the rarest foraging type is hovering. A study from Great Britain indicated that hovering does not seem to increase hunting success.
Mammals A high diversity of
rodents may be taken given the chance, as around 60 species of rodent have been recorded in the foods of common buzzards. In southern
Scotland, field voles were the best-represented species in pellets, accounting for 32.1% of 581 pellets. In southern
Norway, field voles were again the main food in years with peak vole numbers, accounting for 40.8% of 179 prey items in 1985 and 24.7% of 332 prey items in 1994. Altogether, rodents amount to 67.6% and 58.4% of the foods in these respective peak vole years. However, in low vole population years, the contribution of rodents to the diet was minor. Common voles were the main foods recorded in central
Slovakia, accounting for 26.5% of 606 prey items. The common vole, or other related vole species at times, were the main foods as well in
Ukraine (17.2% of 146 prey items) ranging east to
Russia in the
Privolshky Steppe Nature Reserve (41.8% of 74 prey items) and in
Samara (21.4% of 183 prey items). In
Belarus, voles, including
Microtus species and
bank voles (
Myodes glareolus), accounted for 34.8% of the biomass on average in 1065 prey items from different study areas over 4 years. Other rodents are taken largely opportunistically rather than by preference. Several
wood mice (
Apodemus ssp.) are known to be taken quite frequently but given their preference for activity in deeper woods than the field-forest interfaces preferred, they are rarely more than secondary food items. All four
ground squirrels that range (mostly) into eastern Europe are also known to be common buzzard prey but little quantitative analysis has gone into how significant such predator-prey relations are. Rodent prey taken have ranged in size from the
Eurasian harvest mouse (
Micromys minutus) to the non-native,
muskrat (
Ondatra zibethicus). Other rodents taken either seldom or in areas where the food habits of buzzards are spottily known include
flying squirrels,
marmots (presumably very young if taken alive),
chipmunks,
spiny rats,
hamsters,
mole-rats,
gerbils,
jirds and
jerboas and occasionally hearty numbers of
dormice, although these are nocturnal. Surprisingly little research has gone into the diets of wintering steppe buzzards in southern Africa, considering their numerous status there. However, it has been indicated that the main prey remains consist of rodents such as the
four-striped grass mouse (
Rhabdomys pumilio) and
Cape mole-rats (
Georychus capensis). Other than rodents, two other groups of mammals can be counted as significant to the diet of common buzzards. One of these main prey types of import in the diets of common buzzards are
leporids or
lagomorphs, especially the
European rabbit (
Oryctolagus cuniculus) where it is found in numbers in a wild or feral state. In all dietary studies from Scotland, rabbits were highly important to the buzzard's diet. In southern Scotland, rabbits constituted 40.8% of remains at nests and 21.6% of pellet contents, while lagomorphs (mainly rabbits but also some young
hares) were present in 99% of remains in
Moray, Scotland. The nutritional richness relative to the commonest prey elsewhere, such as voles, might account for the high productivity of buzzards here. For example, clutch sizes were twice as large on average where rabbits were common (Moray) than were where they were rare (
Glen Urquhart). In northern
Ireland, an area of interest because it is devoid of any native
vole species, rabbits were again the main prey. Here, lagomorphs constituted 22.5% of prey items by number and 43.7% by biomass. While rabbits are non-native, albeit long-established, in the British Isles, in their native area of the
Iberian peninsula, rabbits are similarly significant to the buzzard's diet. In
Murcia, Spain, rabbits were the most common mammal in the diet, making up 16.8% of 167 prey items. Similarly, in different areas and the mean weight of
brown hares taken in Finland was around . One young
mountain hares (
Lepus timidus) taken in Norway was estimated to about . The other significant mammalian prey type is
insectivores, among which more than 20 species are known to be taken by this species, including nearly all the species of
shrew,
mole and
hedgehog found in Europe. Moles are taken particularly often among this order, since as is the case with "vole-holes", buzzards probably tend to watch molehills in fields for activity and dive quickly from their perch when one of the subterranean mammals pops up. The most widely found mole in the buzzard's northern range is the
European mole (
Talpa europaea) and this is one of the more important non-rodent prey items for the species. This species was present in 55% of 101 remains in
Glen Urquhart, Scotland and was the second most common prey species (18.6%) in 606 prey items in
Slovakia. In
Bari, Italy, the
Roman mole (
Talpa romana), of similar size to the European species, was the leading identified mammalian prey, making up 10.7% of the diet. The full-size range of insectivores may be taken by buzzards, ranging from the world's smallest mammal (by weight), the
Etruscan shrew (
Suncus etruscus) to arguably the heaviest insectivore, the
European hedgehog (
Erinaceus europaeus). Mammalian prey for common buzzards other than rodents, insectivores, and lagomorphs is rarely taken. Occasionally, some
weasels such as
least weasel (
Mustela nivalis) and
stoat (
Mustela erminea) are taken, and remains of young
pine martens (
Martes martes) and adult
european polecats (
Mustela putorius) was found in buzzard nest. Numerous larger mammals, including medium-sized carnivores such as
dogs,
cats and
foxes and various
ungulates, are sometimes eaten as carrion by buzzards, mainly during lean winter months. Still-borns of
deer are also visited with some frequency.
Birds mobs a buzzard. Buzzards will readily prey on crows, especially their fledglings. When attacking birds, common buzzards chiefly prey on nestlings and fledglings of small to medium-sized birds, largely
passerines but also a variety of
gamebirds, but sometimes also injured, sickly or unwary but healthy adults. While capable of overpowering birds larger than itself, the common buzzard is usually considered to lack the agility necessary to capture many adult birds, even gamebirds which would presumably be weaker fliers considering their relatively heavy bodies and small wings. On the contrary, in southern
Scotland, even though the buzzards were taking relatively large bird prey, largely
red grouse (
Lagopus lagopus scotica), 87% of birds taken were reportedly adults. They also prey on a wide size range of birds, ranging down to Europe's smallest bird, the
goldcrest (
Regulus regulus). Other assorted avian prey has included a few species of
waterfowl, most available
pigeons and doves,
cuckoos,
swifts,
grebes,
rails, nearly 20 assorted
shorebirds,
tubenoses,
hoopoes,
bee-eaters and several types of
woodpecker. Birds with more conspicuous or open nesting areas or habits are more likely to have fledglings or nestlings attacked, such as water birds, while those with more secluded or inaccessible nests, such as pigeons/doves and woodpeckers, adults are more likely to be hunted.
Reptiles and amphibians but was flushed from its catch prey in
Armenia The common buzzard may be the most regular avian predator of reptiles and amphibians in Europe apart from the sections where they are sympatric with the largely snake-eating
short-toed eagle. In total, the prey spectrum of common buzzards include nearly 50 herpetological prey species. In studies from northern and southern Spain, the leading prey numerically were both reptilian, although in
Biscay (northern Spain) the leading prey (19%) was classified as "unidentified snakes". In
Murcia, the most numerous prey was the
ocellated lizard (
Timon lepidus), at 32.9%. In total, at Biscay and Murcia, reptiles accounted for 30.4% and 35.9% of the prey items, respectively. Findings were similar in a separate study from northeastern Spain, where reptiles amounted to 35.9% of prey. In
Bari, Italy, reptiles were the main prey, making up almost exactly half of the biomass, led by the large
green whip snake (
Hierophis viridiflavus), at 24.2% of food mass. However, in at least one case, the corpse of a female buzzard was found envenomed over the body of an
adder that it had killed. In some parts of range, the common buzzard acquires the habit of taking many frogs and toads. For wintering steppe buzzards in
Zimbabwe, one source went so far as to refer to them as primarily insectivorous, apparently being somewhat locally specialized to feeding on
termites. Stomach contents in buzzards from
Malawi apparently consisted largely of
grasshoppers (alternately with
lizards).
Fish tend to be the rarest class of prey found in the common buzzard's foods. There are a couple cases of predation of fish detected in the
Netherlands, while elsewhere they have been known to have fed upon
eels and
carp.
Interspecies predatory relationships being
mobbed by a pair of common buzzards over the
Isle of Canna, as the eagle will sometimes prey on the buzzard Common buzzards co-occur with dozens of other raptorial birds through their breeding, resident and wintering grounds. There may be many other birds that broadly overlap in prey selection to some extent. Furthermore, their preference for interfaces of forest and field is used heavily by many birds of prey. Some of the most similar species by diet are the
common kestrel (
Falco tinniculus),
hen harrier (
Circus cyaenus) and
lesser spotted eagle (
Clanga clanga), not to mention nearly every European species of owl, as all but two may locally prefer
rodents such as
voles in their diets. Diet overlap was found to be extensive between buzzards and
red foxes (
Vulpes vulpes) in
Poland, with 61.9% of prey selection overlapping by species although the dietary breadth of the fox was broader and more opportunistic. Both fox dens and buzzard roosts were found to be significantly closer to high vole areas relative to the overall environment here. The only other widely found European
Buteo, the rough-legged buzzard, comes to winter extensively with common buzzards. It was found in southern Sweden, habitat, hunting and prey selection often overlapped considerably. Rough-legged buzzards appear to prefer slightly more open habitat and took slightly fewer
wood mice than common buzzard. Roughlegs also hover much more frequently and are more given to hunting in high winds. The two buzzards are aggressive towards one another and excluded each other from winter feeding territories in similar ways to the way they exclude conspecifics. In northern
Germany, the buffer of their habitat preferences apparently accounted for the lack of effect on each other's occupancy between the two buzzard species. A more direct negative effect has been found in buzzard's co-existence with
northern goshawk (
Accipiter gentilis). Despite the considerable discrepancy of the two species dietary habits, habitat selection in Europe is largely similar between buzzards and goshawks. Goshawks are slightly larger than buzzards and are more powerful, agile and generally more aggressive birds, and so they are considered dominant. In studies from Germany and Sweden, buzzards were found to be less disturbance sensitive than goshawks but were probably displaced into inferior nesting spots by the dominant goshawks. The exposure of buzzards to a dummy goshawk was found to decrease breeding success whereas there was no effect on breeding goshawks when they were exposed to a dummy buzzard. In many cases, in
Germany and
Sweden, goshawks displaced buzzards from their nests to take them over for themselves. In
Poland, buzzards productivity was correlated to prey population variations, particularly voles which could vary from 10 to 80 per hectare, whereas goshawks were seemingly unaffected by prey variations; buzzards were found here to number 1.73 pair per against goshawk 1.63 pair per . In contrast, the slightly larger counterpart of buzzards in North America, the
red-tailed hawk (which is also slightly larger than American goshawks, the latter averaging smaller than European ones) are more similar in diet to goshawks there. Redtails are not invariably dominated by goshawks and are frequently able to outcompete them by virtue of greater dietary and habitat flexibility. Furthermore, red-tailed hawks are apparently equally capable of killing goshawks as goshawks are of killing them (killings are more one-sided in buzzard-goshawk interactions in favour of the latter). Other raptorial birds, including many of similar or mildly larger size than common buzzards themselves, may dominate or displace the buzzard, especially with aims to take over their nests. Species such as the
black kite (
Milvus migrans),
booted eagle (
Hieraeetus pennatus) and the
lesser spotted eagle have been known to displace actively nesting buzzards, although in some cases the buzzards may attempt to defend themselves. The broad range of accipitrids that take over buzzard nests is somewhat unusual. More typically, common buzzards are victims of nest parasitism to
owls and
falcons, as neither of these other kinds of raptorial birds builds their own nests, but these may regularly take up occupancy on already abandoned or alternate nests rather than ones the buzzards are actively using. Even with birds not traditionally considered raptorial, such as
common ravens, may compete for nesting sites with buzzards. In urban vicinities of southwestern England, it was found that
peregrine falcons (
Falco peregrinus) were harassing buzzards so persistently, in many cases resulting in injury or death for the buzzards, the attacks tending to peak during the falcon's breeding seasons and tend to be focused on subadult buzzards. Despite often being dominated in nesting site confrontations by even similarly sized raptors, buzzards appear to be bolder in direct competition over food with other raptors outside of the context of breeding, and has even been known to displace larger birds of prey such as
red kites (
Milvus milvus) and female buzzards may also dominate male goshawks (which are much smaller than the female goshawk) at disputed kills. Common buzzards are occasionally threatened by predation by other raptorial birds. Northern goshawks have been known to have preyed upon buzzards in a few cases. Much larger raptors are known to have killed a few buzzards as well, including
steppe eagles (
Aquila nipalensis) on migrating steppe buzzards in
Israel. Further instances of predation on buzzards have involved
golden,
eastern imperial (
Aquila heliaca),
Bonelli's (
Aquila fasciata) and
white-tailed eagles (
Haliaeetus albicilla) in Europe. Besides preying on adult buzzard, white-tailed eagles have been known to raise buzzards with their own young. These are most likely cases of eagles carrying off young buzzard nestlings with the intention of predation but, for unclear reasons, not killing them. Instead the mother eagle comes to brood the young buzzard. Despite the difference of the two species diets, white-tailed eagles are surprisingly successful at raising young buzzards (which are conspicuously much smaller than their own nestlings) to fledging. Studies in
Lithuania of white-tailed eagle diets found that predation on common buzzards was more frequent than anticipated, with 36 buzzard remains found in 11 years of study of the summer diet of the white-tailed eagles. While nestling buzzards were multiple times more vulnerable to predation than adult buzzards in the Lithuanian data, the region's buzzards expelled considerable time and energy during the late nesting period trying to protect their nests. The most serious predator of common buzzards, however, is almost certainly the
Eurasian eagle-owl (
Bubo bubo). This is a very large owl with a mean body mass about three to four times greater than that of a buzzard. The eagle-owl, despite often taking small mammals that broadly overlap with those selected by buzzards, is considered a "super-predator" that is a major threat to nearly all co-existing raptorial birds, capably destroying whole broods of other raptorial birds and dispatching adult raptors even as large as eagles. Due to their large numbers in edge habitats, common buzzards frequently feature heavily in the eagle-owl's diet. Eagle-owls, as will some other large owls, also readily expropriate the nests of buzzards. In the
Czech Republic and in
Luxembourg, the buzzard was the third and fifth most frequent prey species for eagle-owls, respectively. The reintroduction of eagle-owls to sections of
Germany has been found to have a slight deleterious effect on the local occupancy of common buzzards. The only sparing factor is the temporal difference (the buzzard nesting later in the year than the eagle-owl) and buzzards may locally be able to avoid nesting near an active eagle-owl family. As the ecology of the wintering population is relatively little studied, a similar very large owl at the top of the avian food chain, the
Verreaux's eagle-owl (
Bubo lacteus), is the only known predator of wintering steppe buzzards in southern Africa. Despite not being known predators of buzzards, other large, vole-eating owls are known to displace or to be avoided by nesting buzzards, such as
great grey owls (
Strix nebulosa) and
Ural owls (
Strix uralensis). Unlike with large birds of prey, next to nothing is known of mammalian predators of common buzzards, despite up to several nestlings and fledglings being likely depredated by mammals. Common buzzards themselves rarely present a threat to other raptorial birds but may occasionally kill a few of those of smaller size. The buzzard is a known predator of
Eurasian sparrowhawks (
Accipiter nisus),
common kestrel and
lesser kestrel (
Falco naumanni) . Perhaps surprisingly, given the nocturnal habits of this prey, the group of raptorial birds the buzzard is known to hunt most extensively is owls. Known owl prey has included
Western barn owls (
Tyto alba),
European scops owls (
Otus scops),
tawny owls (
Strix aluco),
little owls (
Athene noctua),
boreal owls (
Aegolius funereus),
long-eared owls (
Asio otus) and
short-eared owls (
Asio flammeus). Despite their relatively large size, tawny owls are known to avoid buzzards as there are several records of them preying upon the owls. ==Breeding==