Characteristics
The bald eagle
is 30-31 inches in length with a wingspan of 6-7 feet. It has a dark brown body, a white tail and a white head and shoulders. It has bright yellow eyes, a large hooked yellow bill, and powerful yellow legs and talons. Young bald eagles won't have a white head and shoulders until they are about five years old. Males and females look alike, although the female is a little larger.
Range
The bald eagle
breeds from Alaska east to Newfoundland and in scattered locations throughout the United States. It winters along coasts and large rivers in much of the United States and Canada.
The bald eagle migrates in areas where its water source freezes in the winter.
Habitat
The bald eagle can be found
on
lakes, rivers, marshes and seacoasts where it can find fish!
Diet
The bald eagle is a fish eater, although it will also eat birds, small mammals and carrion. It has excellent eyesight and spots its prey from a high perch or from the sky and swoops down and grabs it in its powerful talons. The bald eagle will also steal food from other birds! |
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Life Cycle
Male and female bald eagles exhibit an unusual courtship ritual. They lock talons together at high altitudes and then tumble and
somersaulting towards the ground and finally breaking apart at the last minute! The
female bald eagle lays 2 or 3 eggs in a enormous nest made of sticks placed in a tall tree or sometimes on a cliff top. Bald eagle pairs mate for life and use the same nest year-after-year. They add new sticks each season. Eagle nests can be up to six feet across and eight feet deep and weigh hundreds of pounds! The eggs hatch in 5-6 weeks and the chick fledge when they are about 12 weeks old. Both parents care for and feed the chicks. They stay with their parents until they are about 20 weeks old.
Behavior
The bald eagle is listed as a threatened species in all of the United States except for Alaska. Bald eagle populations have seen major declines twice since the first Europeans came to America. The first decline came in the 1800s. As settlers moved west, they cleared land and competed with the bald eagle for fish. They also hunted the eagle. The
U.S. Bald Eagle Act of 1940 prohibited the killing of bald eagles in all the states except Alaska.
The bald eagle population was just beginning to recover when a new threat emerged. The
pesticide DDT, which was used to control
insects that damaged crops, was getting into the food that the bald eagle ate. The pesticide made it more difficult for the bald eagle to absorb calcium and the lack of calcium made the shells of the bald eagle's eggs thinner. Many eggs broke before they could hatch and the bald eagle population dropped. DDT use was outlawed in the U.S. in 1972, and the bald eagle population has slowly recovered.
Image Credits: Clipart.com unless otherwise noted
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