Fascinating Bald Eagle Facts
The bald eagle is the
national bird as well as national animal of the United States of America. It's
a uniquely North American eagle, ranging from northern Mexico through all of
the contiguous United States, into Canada and Alaska. The only state the bird
doesn't call home is Hawaii. The eagle lives near any open body of water,
preferring a habitat with large trees in which it builds is nests.
Fast Facts: Bald Eagle
Common Name: Bald eagle
Scientific Name:
Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Distinguishing
Features: White head and tail with yellow eyes, beak, and feet.
Size: 70 to 102 cm (28
to 40 in) in length, mass of 3 to 6.3 kg (6.6 to 13.9 lb)
Wingspan: 1.8 to 2.3 m
(5.9 to 7.5 ft)
Diet: Carnivorous
Average Lifespan: 20
years (wild); up to 50 years (captivity)
Habitat: North America
Conservation Status:
Least Concern
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Fun Fact: Benjamin
Franklin opposed selection of the bald eagle as the American emblem. He felt
the eagle was a cowardly bird and had "bad moral character."
Appearance, Wingspan, and Call
Bald eagles are not
actually bald—by adulthood, they have white-feathered heads. In fact, the bald
eagle's scientific name, Haliaaetus leucocephalus, translates from the Greek to
mean "sea eagle white head."
Immature eagles
(eaglets) have brown plumage. Adult birds are brown with a white head and tail.
They have golden eyes, yellow feet, and hooked yellow beaks. Males and females
look the same, but mature females are about 25% larger than males. An adult
eagle's body length ranges from 70 to 102 cm (28 to 40 in), with a wingspan of
1.8 to 2.3 m (5.9 to 7.5 ft) and a mass of 3 to 6 kg (6.6 to 13.9 lb).
It can be challenging
to identify a distant bald eagle in flight, but there is an easy way to tell an
eagle from a vulture or hawk. While large hawks soar with raised wings and
turkey vultures hold their wings in a shallow V-shape, the bald eagle soars
with its wings essentially flat.
Bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) soaring with characteristic flat wings.
The sound of a bald
eagle is somewhat like a gull. Their call is a combination of high-pitched
staccato chirps and whistles. Believe it or not, when you hear the sound of a
bald eagle in a movie, you're actually hearing the piercing cry of the
red-tailed hawk.
Diet
When available, the bald
eagle prefers to eat fish. However, it will also eat smaller birds, bird eggs,
and other small animals (e.g., rabbits, crabs, lizards, frogs). Bald eagles
choose prey that is unlikely to put up much of a fight. They'll readily drive
off other predators to steal a kill and will eat carrion. They also take
advantage of human habitation, scavenging from fish processing plants and
dumps.
Eagle-Eye Vision
Bald eagles truly have
eagle-eye vision. Their vision is sharper than any human's, and their field of
view is wider. In addition, eagles can see ultraviolet light. Like cats, the
birds have an inner eyelid called a nictitating membrane. Eagles can close their
main eyelids, yet still see through the translucent protective membrane.
Mating, Nesting, and Reproduction
Bald eagles become
sexually mature at four to five years of age. Ordinarily, the birds mate for
life, but they will seek new mates if one dies or if the pair repeatedly fails
at breeding. The mating season occurs in the autumn or spring, depending on
location. Courtship includes elaborate flight, which includes a display in
which the pair flies high, locks talons, and falls, disengaging just prior to
striking the ground. Talon-clasping and cartwheeling may occur during
territorial battles, as well as for courtship.
During courtship, bald eagle clasp talon and cartwheel toward the surface.
Bald eagle nests are
the largest and most massive bird nests in the world. A nest may measure up to
8 feet across and weigh up to a ton. Male and female eagles work together to
build a nest, which is made of sticks and is usually situated in a large tree.
The female eagle lays a
clutch of one to three eggs within 5 to 10 days of mating. Incubation takes 35
days. Both parents care for the eggs and the downy gray-colored chicks. An
eaglet's first true feathers and beak are brown. Fledgling eagles transition to
adult plumage and learn to fly great distances (hundreds of miles per day). On
average, a bald eagle lives about 20 years in the wild, although captive birds
have been known to live 50 years.
Swimming Ability
Eagles are known for
soaring in the skies, but they fare well in water, too. Like other fish eagles,
the bald eagle can swim. Eagles float well and flap their wings to use them as
paddles. Bald eagles have been observed swimming at sea and also near shore.
Near land, eagles elect to swim when carrying a heavy fish.
Swimming bald eagle.
In 1967, the bald eagle
was listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Preservation Act. In
1973, it was listed under the new Endangered Species Act. The dramatic
population decline that led to near-extirpation included unintentional
poisoning (mostly from DDT and lead shot), hunting, and habitat destruction. By
2004, however, bald eagle numbers had recovered enough that the bird was listed
in the IUCN Red List as "least concern." Since that time, bald eagle
numbers have continued to grow.
Sources
del Hoyo, J., Elliott,
A., & Sargatal, J., eds. (1994). Handbook of the Birds of the World Vol. 2.
Lynx Edicions, Barcelona. ISBN 84-87334-15-6.
Ferguson-Lees, J.;
Christie, D. (2001). Raptors of the World. London: Christopher Helm. pp.
717–19. ISBN 0-7136-8026-1.
Isaacson, Philip M.
(1975). The American Eagle (1st ed.). Boston, MA: New York Graphic Society.
ISBN 0-8212-0612-5.
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