
A Proud and Powerful Bird
The most recognizable eagle in North America
is the bald eagle. A large powerful predatory bird,
bald eagles are a type of fish eagle. They fly low over the water and snatch
up fish with their powerful talons.
Adult bald eagles are dark brown to black. They have a distinctive white head
and a sweeping wingspan of 2.5
m. They live all across North America, especially near wetlands and
coasts. Bald eagles were once endangered throughout
most of their range but are making a comeback.
Bald eagles spend much of their time soaring over land and water. They are
looking for prey. Bald eagles seek out warm air currents known as thermals.
Thermals help them stay aloft without using up too much energy. This helps
the eagles hunt for longer periods of time.
©G.Ellis/GLOBIO.org Where Eagles Fly
Bald eagles are found in Canada, northern
Mexico, and every state of the United States except Hawaii. They usually travel
and gather in small flocks or remain solitary. In a few locations, where
foods such as salmon are
plentiful in late winter, thousands of bald eagles will gather. One such place
is the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve, in southeastern Alaska, U.S.A., where over
3,000 birds sometimes gather.
Strong and Lightweight
Bald eagle bodies are light (less than 6.5
kg) and strong - two features that are perfect for flying and for catching prey.
The lightness of their bodies allows them to get off the ground and fly high,
so they can look down and hunt for prey. Their strength is important for
diving down, seizing prey, and carrying it away.
Bald eagles are large and powerful birds – to discover more click below.
Dive-bombing for Dinner
Eagles feed mainly on fish.
But they will also eat water birds, small mammals, and carrion.
Eagles can carry off a fish that weighs half as much as the eagle itself! Eagles
can fly up to 48
kph and can dive at speeds up to 160
kph. Their keen eyesight allows them to spot fish at distances of up to 1.5
km.
Big Birds Need Big Nests
Bald eagles mate for life, but they may separate
briefly during the non-nesting season. They make their nests,
called aeries,in
tall trees near large bodies of water or wetlands. They use sticks, soft mosses,
feathers, grasses, and leaves to build their nests.
They come back to the same nest every year. Each year they add new material
to make the nest bigger and more comfortable. Eagle nests can reach up to 3
m across and 1
m high. They can weigh about as much as a car! If storms or other natural
causes destroy the eagles’ nests, they often rebuild in a tree nearby.
In winter, most migrate to
a winter feeding ground. A few bald eagles may live year-round in one place
if all the conditions are right.
Young eaglets leave the nest when they are 12-15 weeks old. Until
this time and sometimes even after, young eagles depend on their parents
for food and protection.
©Tom & Pat Leeson
Nesting: The Creative Way
If there are no trees, some eagles will make their nests on whatever they
find - on the top of old telephone poles, dock pilings, ship masts, even light
posts. Bald eagles will sometimes nest on the ground. They only do this on
islands or other places where there are no trees and no predators on
the ground.
From Eaglet to Eagle
After an eagle pair builds a nest, the female
lays one to three eggs in the spring. The parents incubate the
eggs for about 35 days before chicks hatch. Both eagle parents share the duties
of hunting, incubating the eggs, watching the nest, and feeding and caring
for the babies, or eaglets.
Many times, only the strongest eaglet will survive the first few weeks of life.
When an eaglet is strong enough, it will learn to fly. Usually after 12 to
15 weeks, an eaglet is fully-grown and leaves the nest for good.
Eagle chicks hatch 35 days after an egg is laid. They are covered
in soft fuzzy feathers. Their parents feed them fish and meat that they’ve
caught and torn up into bite-sized pieces.
©Tom & Pat Leeson
Young bald eagles start out with a mixture of brown and white coloring all
over their bodies. Their beaks are black. After four to five years, they grow
dark feathers on their bodies and white feathers on their heads, necks, and
tails. Their beaks turn bright yellow. Many people are surprised to learn that
bald eagles are not bald. The term “bald” comes from the Old English
word balde (BAWLD), which means “white.”
The Sign of a Healthy Environment
As predators, eagles are at the top of the food
chain. If bald eagles are healthy it means the surrounding wetland or
coastal environment is probably healthy, too. Scientists watch eagles
closely for signals about the health of the environment.
As predators, eagles are at the top of the food
chain. If bald eagles are healthy it means the surrounding wetland or
coastal environment is probably healthy, too. Scientists watch eagles
closely for signals about the health of the environment.
An Important Symbol
Native American peoples have a special respect
for the bald eagle. Different native cultures across North America have legends about
bald eagles. The stories tell the role eagles have played in the cultures’ histories.
Along the West Coast, several cultures honor eagles by carving them into large
wooden totem
poles. The bald eagle is also the national bird of the United States of
America.
Native Americans carved images of bald eagles at the top of totems (second
and fourth totem from right) to show their powerful position in the world.
This drawing by Gordon Miller is based on a photograph of the Haida Gwaii
village at Ninstints on Queen Charlotte Island, B.C., Canada. The photograph
was taken in 1913 by photographer C.F. Newcombe.
©Gordon Miller Bald Eagles Under Threat
Human-made poisons can affect bald eagles.
One of the greatest threats to bald eagle populations in the past hundred years
was the use of the pesticide DDT.
Farmers used this pesticide to control insects that were damaging their crops.
Unfortunately, the pesticide also made its way into wetlands. It got into the
bodies of the fish that bald eagles ate. The poison made the eagles’ eggshells
very thin. When the parents sat on the eggs to incubate them, the shells were
crushed.
Bald eagles build large nests made of sticks and other materials. A
nesting pair will use the same nest year after year, adding new materials
to make it bigger each season. They usually nest in the top of tall
trees.
©M.Quinton/Minden Pictures
Protecting the Bald Eagle
At one time, hunting and pollution had reduced the number of bald eagles to
about 2,000. Hunting bald eagles in the United States was banned in 1940. In
1972, the United States banned DDT. These bans have helped the bald eagle population
recover. Protective conservation laws have also helped bald eagles bounce back.
Today, over 35,000 bald eagles can be seen flying over Canada and the United
States.