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Bald Eagle, One Of Oldest In Country, Dies From Electrocution In Alaska

Bald Eagle

DAN JOLING   02/11/11 11:12 PM ET   AP

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A Kodiak Island bald eagle survived 25 years of Alaska hazards but met an unfortunate fate last month on the crossbar of a utility pole: electrocution.

A band attached to its leg showed the bird to be the second-oldest bald eagle documented in Alaska and one of the oldest in the country.

"It would be, based on the bird-banding record that I've seen, one of the top 10 oldest birds ever recorded," said Robin Corcoran, a wildlife biologist from the Kodiak Island National Wildlife Refuge.

The eagle's death was first reported by the Kodiak Daily Mirror.

The death was of high interest to raptor biologists, who have no other way besides recovered bands to confirm the age of mature wild eagles.

"Once they reach that full adult stage – white head, brown body, white tail – you don't have any idea how old they are," said Steve Lewis, coordinator of raptor management for the Alaska region of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The oldest eagle documented in the country was a 32-year-old bird from Maine. Alaska's oldest recorded eagle was a 28-year-old from the Chilkat Valley outside Haines. Lewis suspects most eagles don't approach three decades but proving that with leg bands can be haphazard.

"Banding is one of these things, you put a lot of effort into it and you get little return, but the returns you get are really interesting," he said.

The odds of recovering a band go up around communities such as Kodiak. The city is on the island of the same name, the second largest in the U.S. The Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge covers one-third of the island and has a resident population of 2,500 birds, but the city is a drawing card for other eagles.

Hundreds from mainland Alaska gather there each winter when lakes and streams freeze up. Eagles are opportunistic eaters, grabbing fish and small mammals, but America's national bird is not above Dumpster-diving or feasting on other tidbits from humans.

"The canneries and fish process plants, the commercial fishing, it's a real magnet," Corcoran said.

Kodiak's only road out of town crosses hills to the nation's largest Coast Guard base.

"When you drive that road, there are easily, every day, one hundred birds, just on the hillside, sunning themselves in the trees if it's sunny, or just trying to stay dry," Corcoran said. "And then if you look down at the canneries, right on the water's edge, there are another hundred, at least a hundred birds, perched on the cannery rooftops."

A garbage bag in the back of a Kodiak pickup will attract winged intruders. Fishermen mostly are conscientious, she said, but boats will draw birds.

"Sometimes when the fishing boats come in, the nets are spun up on the back deck, there will still be some fish in there. The birds are all over the nets. You can see a dozen birds on one boat, just on the nets," Corcoran said. "Usually they're accompanied by Steller sea lions that are climbing up in the back of the boat to see what's left on the back deck."

Fish bait is another temptation.

"Yesterday there was some bait left unattended on the back deck of a boat and that caused a frenzy," Corcoran said. "The birds ended up getting soiled and fighting over it, and then they fall into the water."

Oiled by fish slime, feathers are less waterproof and eagles are more prone to hypothermia, she said.

Refuge biologists have retrieved starved eagles and birds killed by airplanes, cars or leg-hold traps meant for fox. Sometimes there are mass mortalities.

Fifty eagles in January 2008 spotted an uncovered dump truck filled with fish guts outside a Kodiak seafood plant. Twenty drowned or were crushed. The rest were so slimed they had to be cleaned.

The refuge last year sent off 30 dead eagles to the National Eagle Repository northeast of Denver. Thirty to 40 eagle dead eagles recovered is typical, Corcoran said.

The electrocuted bird was captured in July 1989 as part of research project into possible health damage from the Exxon Valdez oil spill, which had occurred on March 24 that year.

"It was a beautiful older female," Corcoran said. The power pole near a cannery had been fitted with two devices designed to protect eagles but it perched on the lowest of three cross bars where utility authorities did not believe there was enough room to alight.

Lewis said there may be a new candidate for Alaska's oldest eagle. A dead eagle was found late last year on Adak Island in the Aleutians and may be as old as 29 1/2 years.

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A Kodiak Island bald eagle survived 25 years of Alaska hazards but met an unfortunate fate last month on the crossbar of a utility pole: electrocution. A band attached to it...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A Kodiak Island bald eagle survived 25 years of Alaska hazards but met an unfortunate fate last month on the crossbar of a utility pole: electrocution. A band attached to it...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:02 PM on 02/27/2011
Just happened to be looking when this happened to a crow one day last summer.  The uproar from the other crows was amazing.  I walked over to were it had fallen with the thought in mind that CPR can be successfully used on a human for quite a long time after an accidental electrocution.  

So....?  How do you give CPR to a crow?  I held it by the feet and swung it round and round with more force at one end of the circle.  The crows were outraged.  They made dives at me. ( I never saw The Birds, i love crows and am a close observer of them.)  It didn't work.  The crow was fried.  The crows stayed across the road for over an hour with their dead one.   

If someone knows how to give CPR to a bird, i would like to know.
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05:29 PM on 02/21/2011
"it perched on the lowest of three cross bars where utility authorities did not believe there was enough room to alight."

Proof that humans suck and are stupid. How much would have it cost to secure the 3rd one, again? Idiots!
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:22 AM on 02/17/2011
Typical midlife crisis.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cailleach Echo
Retired but still a proud
11:28 PM on 02/16/2011
http://www.hcn.org/issues/144/4657

"The Endangered Species Act, the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Eagle Protection Act all protect raptors. Utilities that don't fix lines that kill eagles face fines of $200,000 to $500,000."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cailleach Echo
Retired but still a proud
11:26 PM on 02/16/2011
BTW, utility companies are required by federal law to put up protection against electrocution. If this is done as the poles go up. its quite inexpensive. Retrofitting is expensive however.

In the Tucson area, fully 25% of the breeding age Harris' hawks die from electrocution. IMO, that's more expensive than the protective perches.

This site has some interesting info and photos. Scroll down -
http://www.chelanpud.org/documents/Avian_Protection_Plan.pdf

About the huge osprey nests on top of utility poles -
http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20100328/NEWS03/703289852/-1/taxonomylist
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jonthebru
Li 'dat!
03:43 PM on 02/27/2011
Oh, that's about Arizona. We know about Arizona. Alaska is like Arizona, just colder and with rivers that actually have water running. Humans, as usual, are the problem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cailleach Echo
Retired but still a proud
11:15 PM on 02/16/2011
NPR did a story some time back about eagles swooping down and grabbing up masses of fish entrails. The story said they would sometimes drop some of the fish guts - onto cars, in backyards and even on people.

I'm very lucky to live where I'm able to watch eagles a good part of every year. There's an active nest not far from where I live and every year we watch the progress of the hatchlings all the way through to fledging.

Raptors are important to the food chain. If not for them, our grain stores would be over run with rodents and our grocery prices would go through the roof.

But I think we should protect them just because they are glorious creatures.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:04 PM on 02/27/2011
Do you know how to give CPR to a bird?  Is it possible?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harpseal60
I'm not bossy, I just have better ideas than you.
11:08 PM on 02/15/2011
Can anyone vouch for Sarah's where-abouts when this happened?
11:10 PM on 02/15/2011
Check her kitchen cabinet for a box of Eagle Helper.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harpseal60
I'm not bossy, I just have better ideas than you.
11:07 PM on 02/15/2011
The Native Americans believe the bald eagle gets it's white head because they push the sun across the sky each day. Very majestic creatures.
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amaboss52
I think, therefore I am, I think?
02:54 PM on 02/15/2011
Watching them fly, glide and dip is a thing of great beauty. In Colorado every once in a while you'll be lucky enough to see one in the Mountains, gliding over a lake looking for a fish to snag. Eagles mate for life, that gives them one up on us and if one of the pair dies the other doesn't usually go looking for another mate. Now thats what I call true love!
10:11 AM on 02/23/2011
Just want to correct you on one thing. Though they do mate for life, if one of the pair dies they will pick up a new mate as soon as possible. They are magnificent animals, but let's not anthropomorphize, the live by the law of nature, aka the need to breed.
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amaboss52
I think, therefore I am, I think?
02:49 PM on 02/15/2011
Are we absolutely sure old dumm @$$ didin't shoot if from a helicopter for fun?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Izzymeister
Crush & Flush the GOP 2012 !!!!
11:56 AM on 02/15/2011
Seeing one of these magnificent Bald eagles at Cape Canaveral was a highlight for me. They are so beautiful and majestic, with a huge wingspan and glorious white heads. They are a treasure that we have to protect. it makes no sense that we can't eliminate the dangers of high power wires.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
12:48 PM on 02/15/2011
"it makes no sense that we can't eliminate the dangers of high power wires. "

How about it makes no sense for you to be using a ciomputer since it draws its electricity from high power wires. OR... It would cost more than the war in Iraq to eliminate the dangers of high power wires... that happened to kill an old bird in Alaska... Yes Bald Eagles are awesome, but hey they don't normally get to that age anyway... how can you be so sure this old eagle was just looking for some assisted suicide because it couldn't hunt effectively anymore? Maybe it just wanted to go out with some dignity?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Izzymeister
Crush & Flush the GOP 2012 !!!!
01:07 PM on 02/15/2011
Kdog , you are a sick puppy. It may be time to put you down. Do you want to be buried or cremated? I want you to go with the dignity you deserve.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SmileDocMiami
If you're against gay marriage, don't marry a gay.
11:51 AM on 02/15/2011
Wow. The mental image of 50 bald eagles fighting over a pile of fish guts. Just wow.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
lisakaz2
Da ministero dell'interno di Snark.
11:44 AM on 02/15/2011
RIP Ms. Eagle. I hope Colbert covers the subject. Stephen Jr. is STILL out there!
11:32 AM on 02/15/2011
If you put a place to perch above the crossbar, then all bird electrocutions would be eliminated.

Also, if we were to put a cage around wind farm propellers to keep birds out, then we would eliminate all bird deaths from birds flying into the propellers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KDog76A
Neither political party is good for America
12:58 PM on 02/15/2011
1 we don't have enough wood, plastic and/or steel to do that

2 putting a cage around a wind farm propeller would render it useless and make so top-heavy it would tip over.
04:22 PM on 02/15/2011
1. We most certainly do have enough material to make perches. It doesn't take that much material more than that which is already used.

2. The cage would not render it useless. 99% of the wind would still be able to travel through unhindered. The material needed would not need to weigh very much at all.
10:26 AM on 02/15/2011
Very sad !