Chicken kindapper

So sorry for your loss. I can't help ID the predator.

Coopers hawks are small- only about 18" long and weigh about a pound. They usually eat songbirds like robins but could kill chickens. Doubt a 1# bird could carry a 20# dog though!
I've seen them kill and eat prey on the ground. Around here, (we have several nests nearby), there is often a pile of scattered feathers. They leave carcasses too.

Sorry, I didn't specify that the two I've seen were puppies. They don't weigh 20 lbs. These pups were around 6 weeks old and may have been up to around 5-7 lbs. Quite within the range of what just about any hawk larger than a sharp shinned can carry.

Your information, while accepted, is not complete.
Cooper's hawks currently have a measured average of around 18" they can be 20 inches or some even a little larger than that. Size depends somewhat on how much food they get as they grow. The currently measured average wing span (which is the real determiner of power at takeoff and in flight) can be as much as 39-40 inches, with again the odd ball that measures larger. While hawks have been studied, it has been a fairly limited amount of research fully completed and while my own research is still ongoing and not complete (by my standards) there are regional size differences in most hawk species. There has been more research done and published on Bald Eagles than on any other raptor in the USA.

Our Zoo (as an example) once told me that the Harris Hawk was not found in Arkansas. I have taken them photographic evidence of the family of Harris Hawks that live somewhere in my area. Upon seeing the evidence, they still held to the mistaken belief that the Harris Hawk is not a resident of Arkansas. Unfortunate that "scientist" hold fast to what probably was once true but has changed over time. I remember when the world was thought to be flat. The climate changes that Mother Earth is going through at this time, are changing the habitat ranges of a lot of animals. It will also change what grows in any specific area as rain patterns are currently in flux and not resettling anytime soon. This is "Nature", our mother earth is not stagnate or dead, she is a living being and as such goes through changes as she continues along the great circle, just as all living beings do.
 
Sorry, I didn't specify that the two I've seen were puppies. They don't weigh 20 lbs. These pups were around 6 weeks old and may have been up to around 5-7 lbs. Quite within the range of what just about any hawk larger than a sharp shinned can carry.
Bryant redhawk,

A Cooper's hawk, weighing less than 1 pound, cannot fly away with a 5-7 pound animal.
 
Really are rooster fight to the death to procet the hens?


Some roosters might fight, other will run like a chicken (no pun intended) in low light or dark they are all sitting ducks (again no pun intended) that will put up little resistance to a predator...

But, as others have said a rooster is no challenge to many predators, the fight could realistically be over in seconds even from a small predator like a Cooper Hawk or other bird of prey...

Also consider that what you see might not be from one animal or tell the entire story, a hawk (or any other predator) might have killed and ate it's fill leaving the rest for something else to finish or drag off...

As for Cooper Hawks no, they can not fly off with a full grown chicken due to their size, but they will take and kill a full grown chickens far in excess of their own size, fill up and leave the rest behind...
 

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