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Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus

 Bald Eagle Behaviour

Bald Eagle Breeding Behaviour

Breeding Biology

Bald Eagles mate monogamously probably with the same mate each year if successful (Buehler 2000). On the Pacific Coast, pair bonds likely remain intact because eagles stay on the territory for most of the year. It is unclear where pairs on the Pacific Coast select mates but it is likely on the nesting territory. Adults defend against other eagles in the vicinity of the nest. It is uncertain what they are defending; the nest, a fertile mate, the nestlings or the food supply.  The defense includes territorial warning calls and pursuits.

Egg laying occurs in March in southern British Columbia and April in southeast Alaska. A nest can be built in a few weeks but most are assembled over two or three months. Both adults gather nest sticks and the female places them in position. Eagle nests range from about a one meter deep pile of branches to massive structures several meters deep. Branches provide shape and twigs, moss or grass line the cup to hold the eggs. Two eggs but sometimes 1 or 3, are laid in two or three days intervals and incubated for 35-40 days. Eggs are ivory white in colour with no markings and they measure about 7.3 cm long and 5.5 cm wide (Buehler 2000). Females do most of the incubation. Eaglets are covered with a silvery gray down upon hatching. Not much is known about growth of eagles especially on the Pacific Coast. Elsewhere they achieve maximum growth when they are 3 to 4 weeks old. Males attain 102g/d and females 130g/d (Buehler 2000).  The eaglets remain in the nest for about 2 months with males growing their feathers and learning to fly more quickly than females. Sibling mortality is most frequent in the first few weeks after hatching (Bortolotti 1986). In Saskatchewan where eagles have been studied closely, the third chicks were rarely fed and often starved (Gerrard and Bortolotti 1988). Mothers brood nearly continuously until the chicks are 4 weeks old (Buehler 2000).  By 5 weeks, the parents roost in trees nearby.  Third eggs are thought to be insurance eggs in the oft chance that one of the other eggs is lost; if no eggs are lost, the hatched young is discarded so that the food can be directed to the first two young with the greatest survival chances. Both parents feed the chicks that they transport to the nest. Bits of food are torn into small pieces and placed in the mouths of the young. Fathers do most of the feeding of chicks in the first two weeks after hatching. From 3 to 4 weeks, both parents equally provision the young. At 6 weeks the young can feed themselves from food dropped in the nest (Buehler 2000).  Nestlings take to the air as early as 8 weeks of age but some require as much as 14 weeks. Immature eagles remain with their parents for several weeks after leaving the nest and likely follow them to spawning streams. Young eagles are not efficient hunters when they are first beginning to feed themselves and they will often scavenge dead prey. Spawning salmon likely provide the food source they require and explain why eagle populations have remained high along the Pacific Coast.

 

Bald Eagle Feeding Behaviour

Bald eagles eat by killing victims, scavenging carcasses and stealing food obtained by other eagles and birds. On the Pacific Coast, some eagles have specialized on hunting ducks or seabirds. They repeatedly stoop sometimes as pairs on diving ducks which succumb from exhaustion, and on adult seabirds at sea or their young at nesting colonies. They also kill adult herons on nests, young herons recently out of the nest, heron chicks and eggs in nests (Butler 1997). Eagles catch fish by snatching them from the water occasionally becoming waterborne themselves. Eagles are strong but awkward swimmers. Much of the hunting begins with the eagle soaring overhead or from a perch. Once a victim is seen, the eagle will launch a direct rapid flight. Other birds recognize the intention of these flights and quickly avoid the eagle. Victims are caught with the talons and carried to a nearby post to be dispatched with the sharp hooked beak.    

Bald eagles in captivity required at least 425.5 kJ of food energy each day when the air temperature was 5oC (Stalmaster and Gessaman 1982).  About 75% of the food was assimilated. These authors estimated that a 4.5 kg captive eagle required 13 salmon to survive for 90 days in winter. A free-living eagle in Washington State was estimated to need 490 g of salmon each day to maintain its weight. Adults needed 522g/day, sub adults (2-5 yrs old) needed 410 g/d and immatures (<1yr) required 459g/d (Stalmaster and Gessaman 1984).

 

 

Bald Eagle Vocalizations

The calls of adult and immature bald eagles are weak and scratchy sounding. Nestling utter weak peeping noises and by one month begin to sound like those of the adult. Immatures give a cheeping noise when they beg to parents for food. 

 
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