Learn About Eagles PDF Print E-mail

 Frequently Asked Questions

  Have a question about eagles and their habits? Need to know the difference between a male and a female raptor? You'll probably find the answer here! Read more

Injured Raptor Stats

 
Ever wonder how our Educational Ambassadors, Angel, Harriet, Columbia and Donald, whom you all admire so much, arrived here at the National Eagle Center? People like you saw an injured raptor and cared enough to make sure that they were brought to a rehabilitation facility to be treated for their injuries.   read more

Bald Eagle Sightings

 
Each year individuals help the National Eagle Center sight and document migrating eagles. You can help us! read more

Listen to an Eagle

 
Hear the sounds of the eagle from the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Opens in a new window.  Listen

Where to See Bald Eagles

 
 
Looking for soaring raptors? Here's a guide to locations best suited for observing eagles in their habitat. Read more

Physiology of Eagles

 
 
Did you know that while a Bald Eagle's eyesight is very, very good, it has a poorly developed sense of smell? Read more

Diet and Consumption

 
 
There's no drive-thru window for Bald Eagles to visit when hungry. Find out what they eat, and how they get it. Read more

Why are Bald Eagles in Wabasha?

 
 
Because we built for them a nice visitor's center on the river? No - nice as the National Eagle Center building is, the answer has more to do with FOOD. Read more

Habitats

 
 
For an eagle, it's all about a really good PERCH! Bald Eagles spend over 90% of daylight hours perching in both winter and summer. Some have been monitored for perching and have been found to have done so, unmoving, for up to eighteen hours. Read more

Historical and Cultural Significance

 
 
Eagles have long been a powerful symbol of the United States as well as  important to Native American culture. Read more

Eggs, Eaglets and Nesting Habits

 
 
Eagle nests are BIG -- some nests have become so large that they’ve toppled trees, and one of these nests felled by a wind storm in Florida was collected and weighed in at 1,472 pounds!. Read more

Minnesota's Wintering Eagles

 
 
While resident eagles abound in Minnesota, each year the Mississippi River Valley becomes a migration corridor for many species of waterfowl, raptors, and shorebirds that move back and forth from their northern summer homes to the warmer southern wintering grounds of our area. Read more

Help! I found an Injured Eagle

   
If You Find an Injured Eagle or Other Raptor CALL FOR ASSISTANCE! IF POSSIBLE, DO NOT ATTEMPT CAPTURE A RAPTOR YOUR OWN. IT IS DANGEROUS FOR YOU AND THE ANIMAL. Read more

 
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