The Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) is a raptor that is indigenous
to North America, and is the national symbol of the United States
of America. The species was on the brink of extinction late in the
20th century but has largely recovered and now has a stable population.
The bird gets its English and scientific
names from the distinctive white color of the adult's head feathers.
"Baeld" is the Old English word for white; Haliaeetus
is the New Latin for sea eagle, from Greek haliaetos, and leucocephalus
is the Greek for white head, from leukos (white) and kephale (head).
An immature bird has speckled brown
feathers all over, the distinctive head and body plumage arriving
2-3 years later, before sexual maturity. Adult females have a wingspan
of approximately 2.1 meters (7 feet); adult males have a wingspan
of 2 meters (6 feet, 6 inches). Adult females weigh approximately
5.8 kg (12.8 lbs), males weigh 4.1 kg (9 lbs).
Bald eagles are powerful fliers, and
ride thermal convection currents to range far.
Bald Eagles are sexually mature at
4 or 5 years of age. Mated pairs produce between one and three eggs
per year, but it is rare for all three chicks to successfully fledge.
Third chicks are sometimes removed from nests to use in reintroduction
programs in areas where the species has died out.
In such programs, the birds are raised
in boxes, on platforms in the tree canopy, and fed in such a way
that they cannot see the person supplying their food, until they
are old enough to fly and find their own food.
Bald Eagles which are old enough to
nest often return to the area in which they were raised. They are
more social than many other raptor species: an adult bald eagle
looking for a nesting site is more likely to select a location that
contains other immature eagles than one with no eagle population.
The Bald Eagle's diet is varied, including
fish, smaller birds, rodents, and sometimes food scavenged or stolen
from campsites and picnics.
This species has occurred as a vagrant
once in Ireland. The exhausted specimen was discovered by a national
parks worker in a northern heath. Presumably, a storm blew it out
to sea, and the bird struggled across the Atlantic Ocean.
|