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  Bald Eagle    

Bald Eagle

The Bald eagle is listed as threatened by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service and is protected from trade by CITES Appendix I status. This species is no longer in danger of extinction and because of this the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to declare the bald eagle fully recovered and remove it from the threatened and endangered species list. Even if it is removed from the list, it will still be protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.

Reintroduction programs have helped bring the bald eagle back to areas from which they had disappeared. Some states continue reintroduction efforts today. Eaglets used for reintroduction may be captive-hatched, or, since usually only two young per nest survive, they may be transferred from a bald eagle nest with a clutch of more than two. These "extra" eaglets are placed in the nest of an adult pair whose own eggs are infertile or fail to hatch. The "foster parents" readily adopt the eaglets and raise them as their own. In another method eight week old nestling eaglets, many flown in from nests in Alaska, are placed on man-made towers located in remote areas. Biologists stay hidden while providing them with food, and release them when they become able to fly. This technique worked well in New York where only one unsuccessful pair of eagles lived in New York in the 1970's. By the 1990s, there were 20 nesting pairs. The most spectacular recovery, however, took place in the Chesapeake Bay area, where only 32 pairs were nesting in 1977 to produce 18 young, and in 1993, 151 pairs contributed 172 fledglings to the expanding populations.

With these recovery methods, as well as habitat improvement and the banning of DDT, bald eagle populations have steadily increased. Indeed, the number of nesting pairs in the lower 48 United States has increased 10-fold, from less than 450 in the early 1960s, to more than 4,500 adult bald eagle nesting pairs in the 1990s.

Bald eagle recovery in the United States can be considered one of our conservation success stories. However, it will take continued watchfulness to insure that this success continues to perpetuity allowing bald eagles to continue as a symbol of our country's hard fought freedom.