Monday

After decades of absence, the majestic birds have decided Massachusetts is a great place to raise an eaglet or two.

 Just a generation after they were re-introduced, bald eagles are coming back strong in Massachusetts. But at the very same time, polluter allies in Congress are playing political games with the nomination of one of the people who helped pave the way for that comeback: Longtime wildlife champion and Boston native Gina McCarthy, President Barack Obama’s nominee for Environmental Protection Agency administrator.

Success Story

First, the good news. Massachusetts announced this week that bald eagles, once completely wiped out in the state, are now soaring to a strong comeback:

Officials from the Department of Fish and Game (DFG) verified 30 active nests in the Commonwealth, including eight nests along the Connecticut River, six at the Quabbin Reservoir and four along the Merrimack River during Massachusetts’ first Bald Eagle nesting survey. The survey, coordinated by the DFG’s Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife) and involving agency staff and 35 volunteers, was conducted on April 5, 2013.

In addition to the principal bald eagle nesting territories along the Connecticut and Merrimack rivers and at Quabbin Reservoir, other active nests were observed at Wachusett Reservoir, and in the towns of Framingham, Brookfield, Pittsfield, Webster, Middleborough, Fall River and Plymouth. One nest failure was reported at Assawompsett Pond in Lakeville, where the wind blew a nest and two eggs out of the nest tree in early April. Additional eagle sightings were reported in Arlington, Carver, Lunenburg, Russell, Sandisfield and along the Housatonic River.

Photos Credit: Boston.com

Bald eagles, the largest bird of prey native to Massachusetts with a body length of about 3 feet and a wingspan of up to seven feet, have increased in numbers in Massachusetts since being reintroduced to the Quabbin Reservoir between 1982 and 1988. The species was down listed from Endangered to Threatened status in Massachusetts in 2011 and removed from the federal endangered species list in 2007.

To report a bald eagle sighting in Massachusetts, email the Division of Fisheries and Wildlife’s Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program natural.heritage@state.ma.us.


Mercury’s Threat to Bald Eagles

Bald eagles, our national symbol & once common across North America, were pushed to the brink of extinction by the pesticide DDT, pollution from heavy metals like mercury, hunting, habitat loss, and other factors. While we stopped using DDT, banned hunting, and restored what Aldo Leopold called our land ethic, mercury pollution remains a major threat to bald eagles.

Heavy metals are emitted through the burning of fossil fuels and are washed to our waterways, then bioaccumulate in predators at the top of the food chain:


If a small fish eats 50 mercury contaminated plants.

And a large fish eats 100 small fish

And an eagle eats 100 large fish.

50 x 100 x 100 = 250,000. The concentration of mercury in the eagle is 250,000 times larger than it was in the plankton.
Source


VIDEO

Responses to "Bald eagles are making a comeback in Massachusetts! (Video)"

  1. Unknown says:

    Inspiring hopeful and beautiful, let's save our grey wolves and beautiful wild horses from being captured thru cruel means and slaughtered for house meat out west in our country

  2. sharon t. says:

    it is always nice to hear something good has happen: now if we can just get more things like this going on for all the the other animals things would be looking up:

  3. Morgana says:

    Very good news, even for me living in Athens Greece.

  4. Anonymous says:

    We have two pair and three eaglets in our area, northern Michigan. they are so beautiful.I watch them for hours.

  5. Let's keep up the good work by omitting the mercury levels in our water ways.

    Happy to learn this good news.




  6. I live just a town away from Webster and I have seen the Bald Eagles flying over my neighborhood it is a hair raising experience. Let's keep up the good work by omitting high mercury levels in our water supplies.



    :)

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