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===Use in falconry=== {{Main|Falconry}} [[File:Falconry sport of kings (1920) Peregrine falcon striking red grouse.png|thumb|Tame peregrine striking a [[red grouse]], by [[Louis Agassiz Fuertes]] (1920)]] The peregrine falcon is a highly admired falconry bird, and has been used in [[falconry]] for more than 3,000 years, beginning with nomads in [[central Asia]].<ref name=Blood2001/> Its advantages in falconry include not only its athleticism and eagerness to hunt, but an equable disposition that leads to it being one of the easier falcons to train.<ref name=Beebe1984/> The peregrine falcon has the additional advantage of a natural flight style of circling above the falconer ("waiting on") for game to be flushed, and then performing an effective and exciting high-speed diving stoop to take the [[quarry (prey)|quarry]]. The speed of the stoop not only allows the falcon to catch fast flying birds, it also enhances the falcon's ability to execute maneuvers to catch highly agile prey,<ref name=Mills2018/> and allows the falcon to deliver a knockout blow with a fist-like clenched talon against game that may be much larger than itself.<ref name=Scholz/> Additionally the versatility of the species, with agility allowing capture of smaller birds and a strength and attacking style allowing capture of game much larger than themselves, combined with the wide size range of the many peregrine subspecies, means there is a subspecies suitable to almost any size and type of game bird. This size range, evolved to fit various environments and prey species, is from the larger females of the largest subspecies to the smaller males of the smallest subspecies, approximately five to one (approximately 1500 g to 300 g). The males of smaller and medium-sized subspecies, and the females of the smaller subspecies, excel in the taking of swift and agile small game birds such as dove, quail, and smaller ducks. The females of the larger subspecies are capable of taking large and powerful game birds such as the largest of duck species, pheasant, and grouse. Peregrine falcons handled by falconers are also occasionally used to scare away birds at airports to reduce the risk of [[Bird strike|bird-plane strikes]], improving air-traffic safety.<ref name=Kuzir1999/> They were also used to intercept homing pigeons during World War II.<ref name=Enderson2005/> Peregrine falcons have been successfully bred in captivity, both for falconry and for release into the wild.<ref name=SCPBRG/> Until 2004 nearly all peregrines used for falconry in the US were captive-bred from the progeny of falcons taken before the US [[Endangered Species Act]] was enacted and from those few infusions of wild genes available from Canada and special circumstances. Peregrine falcons were removed from the United States' endangered species list in 1999. The successful recovery program was aided by the effort and knowledge of falconers β in collaboration with [[The Peregrine Fund]] and state and federal agencies β through a technique called [[hack (falconry)|hacking]]. Finally, after years of close work with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, a limited take of wild peregrines was allowed in 2004, the first wild peregrines taken specifically for falconry in over 30 years. The development of captive breeding methods has led to peregrines being commercially available for falconry use, thus mostly eliminating the need to capture wild birds for support of falconry. The main reason for taking wild peregrines at this point is to maintain healthy genetic diversity in the breeding lines. Hybrids of peregrines and [[gyrfalcon]]s are also available that can combine the best features of both species to create what many consider to be the ultimate falconry bird for the taking of larger game such as the [[sage-grouse]]. These hybrids combine the greater size, strength, and horizontal speed of the gyrfalcon with the natural propensity to stoop and greater warm weather tolerance of the peregrine. Today, peregrines are regularly paired in captivity with other species such as the [[lanner falcon]] (''F. biarmicus'') to produce the "[[perilanner]]", a bird popular in [[falconry]] as it combines the peregrine's hunting skill with the lanner's hardiness, or the [[gyrfalcon]] to produce large, strikingly coloured birds for the use of falconers.
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