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Raptor Species
Bald Eagle
Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Taxonomy:
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Accipitridae
Subfamily: Buteoninae
Genus: Haliaeetus
Length: 27-35 in.
Weight: 9-14 lbs. (females larger than males)
Wingspan: 70-90 in.
Common Names: American eagle, white-headed eagle, white-headed sea eagle
Etymology: balde (Old English) - "white"; haliaeetos (Greek) - "sea eagle"; leucocephalus (Greek) - "white-headed"
Description: The bald eagle is the only large brown bird with a white head and tail. It has a
massive yellow beak and yellow feet. Immature bald eagles have dark beaks and are dark
all over with highly variable white splotching. The birds don't attain sexual maturity
and the adult plumage of white head and tail until four to five years old. Sexes are
similar in appearance, with females often noticeably larger than males. Northern birds
are larger than southern birds.
Flight: Soars on wide, flat, stiff wings that are held
horizontally. For their size bald eagles are extremely agile and can turn quite
suddenly.
Voice: Bald eagles most commonly scream a gull-like cackle
or whine, often with their heads tossed back when perching. The female's voice is
lower-pitched.
Habitat: Bald eagles are sea eagles and prefer to live
near water, such as lakes, rivers, marshes, and seacoasts.
Distribution: Bald eagles are found over most of the
United States, with the largest populations in Alaska. In the east, they still
breed in upstate New York, Maine, Michigan, and along the Carolina and Florida
coastlines. They are now nesting on inland lakes, a sign of continued recovery.
While the bald eagle was once considered endangered, populations have recovered
and this species may soon be removed from the Endangered Species Act.
Nesting: Bald eagles prefer old growth trees that
extend above the canopy for roosting and nesting, although they will
occasionally use cliffs or ground if no trees are available. Eyries are built
near the tops of tall, live trees or cliffs. They are made of sticks up to two
inches in diameter and lined with moss, grass, pine needles. The same eyries may
be used for years. Bald eagles lay 1-3 relatively small white eggs, and both
males and females incubate the eggs. On average they start breeding at 7-8 years,
but may breed as sub-adults and they don't always breed every year. Bald eagle
incubation lasts 34-37 days, and young eagles fly at 10-11 weeks.
Food: Bald eagles are primarily fish eaters. They can
catch fish 6-12 inches under the surface, and they often go for dead or floating fish.
Bald eagles hunt mostly in the early morning, and sometimes again in late afternoon.
They will occasionally hunt cooperatively when hunting mammals. Bald eagles use
several methods to catch prey, including swooping from a perch or while in flight
and wading from shore into the water and grabbing fish with bill or talons. While
much of the bald eagle's diet consists of fish, they will also eat ducks, rabbits,
herons, squirrels, opossums and carrion. Almost 90% of the salmon eaten by eagles
is carrion, often stolen from other birds such as osprey or immature eagles.
Eagles are successful about 10% of the time when chasing mammals, and 70-80% when
fishing. An adult bald eagle can consume one pound of fish in less than four
minutes! They can lift 1⁄2 of their own weight, and carry 1⁄3 of their own weight.
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