Shop for eagle gifts and other fine items.

About Us

Hours & Admission Eagle Education Gift Store Directions Membership/Volunteer Contact Us Donate

 

 

 

The Human Effects on the Bald Eagle

Killing

Shooting
For centuries eagles have provided easy sport for white settlers. In Florida John Audubon bragged about his marksmanship, killing five eagles in a 24- hour period. He considered them good eating, resembling the taste and texture of veal. Even today shooting accounts for between 20-60% of the mortality each year. Careless hunters cause some of the shootings, others are killed for profit. Some parts of bald eagles are sold to produce “authentic” Indian artifacts that are sold in Europe and the United States.

Traps.
Often time’s eagles are caught in leg-hold traps meant for fur bearing animals such as fox, coyote and raccoon. These traps are baited with carrion and are particularly attractive to scavenging eagles. Even if the bird survives the broken foot or leg, it will typically destroy its wings by flapping frantically to attempt to get away from the trap.

Poisoning
Poisoning is a relatively recent threat to bald eagles which developed after man started using chemicals in the environment. While the chemical age may have benefited mankind, it was decimating the bald eagle population.

Poisons affect eagles in two ways. The first is that eagles can ingest poisons that are placed in bait meant to trap other animals. Secondly, they can assimilate poisons in the form of pollutants or chemical contamination from their environment. The first type of poisoning is usually immediate and dramatic, while the second type can occur gradually, and the effects can be subtle.

Poisoned bait has been used to kill nuisance animals for many years, especially the coyote. The problem with poison bait is that it indiscriminately kills many other scavengers, including bald eagles. Some of the poisons used in the manner include thallium sulfate, strychnine and cyanide. In the last two decades the use of poison bait has been restricted, but problems with poisoning will never disappear altogether.

DDT.
In 1939, the Audubon Society sponsored a major migration study of bald eagles and chose a retired bank manager, Charles Broley, to spearhead the project. 

His studies uncovered something far more sinister and important than new information on migration patterns. Broley noticed that between 1939 and 1947 the number of productive nests declined significantly in Florida, and that the few nests that produced chicks averaged fewer nestlings. By 1947, 41% of Florida nests failed to produce young. Three years later, the percentage of unsuccessful nests had skyrocketed to 78%. Broley found only one productive nest in Florida that year and it contained only a single chick.

It was not just a Florida problem, as he also failed to discover successful nests near his Ontario cabin. Clearly something was very wrong. He theorized that DDT, an organochlorine pesticide, already implicated in animal sterility, was the culprit.

DDT was used during World War II in such operations as delousing prisoners of war and civilians, and for controlling insect populations, which are vectors for human diseases such as malaria. 

This pesticide was heralded as a technological leap forward and was widely used in the U.S. to control mosquitoes in marshes on both coasts. A sign on the side of a truck spraying DDT over the crowds at the Jones Beach State Park (New York) in 1945 proclaimed DDT as a “powerful Insecticide Harmless to Humans”.

DDT is a chlorinated hydrocarbon. It, and its toxic breakdown products, such as DDE, is fat-soluble, which allows it to accumulate in fat tissues of any animal that may ingest it, including humans. While relatively low in toxicity, it is long-lived in the environment and is able to move up the food chain in ever-increasing amount, bioaccumulation in the tissues of predators high on the food chain. Bioaccumulation is the process by which a toxin accumulates from low, very dispersed levels to more concentrated levels as it works its way up the food chain from invertebrates, to fish and eventually to eagles and other animals occupying the top of the food chain (including humans). 

Studies on mergansers show it takes about 10 pounds of fish its toxins for everyone pound of merganser. All of the DDE or DDT in the fish is stored in the fatty tissues of birds for a ten-fold increase in concentration. It takes about 10 pounds of merganser and the associated DDT (equivalent to the amount of DDT in 100 pounds of fish), to make one pound of eagle - another 10-fold increase. Since this process continues throughout the life of the eagles, DDT continues to accumulate at ever-higher levels.

“Sandy” Sprunt, research director of the National Audubon Society, recovered eagle eggs and determined that there was a direct correlation between the amount of DDT present in the eggs and the probability of the eggs hatching. 

At elevated levels, DDT and DDE reduces the bird’s ability to metabolize calcium from their food sources. Thin-shelled eggs resulted and these often broke beneath the weight of the incubating adults resulting in decline in reproduction noticed by Broley. Other species, such as ospreys, brown pelicans and peregrine falcons, all predators living at the top of their food chains, were also affected in similar ways. In addition, some researchers have suggested that some pesticides may mimic the effects of estrogen, causing birth defects, infertility, and possibly even changes in parenting behavior of eagles.

In 1962 Rachel Carson penned her famous book Silent Spring. In this influential and eloquent book she described a spring without birds - a world in which birds were disappearing due to indiscriminate use of pesticides. Partly due to the mounting evidence of the effect of DDT on wildlife, and the public outcry generated by her book, Canada prohibited the use of DDT in 1970 with the U.S. following with its own ban in 1972.

While Carson’s popular book provided linkages between pesticides and the bleak outlook for many of our popular birds and animals, her voice was not the first to warn the world about the problems associated with these toxins. In Birds Over America (1948) Roger Tory Peterson gave one of the first inklings of trouble: 

“Such panaceas as DDT give us pause to ponder. However, some believe that small doses of DDT may even be a boon to wildlife as a substitute for marsh drainage in control of mosquitoes. But by using this dangerous poison widely, before we know more about its properties, we run the risk of turning our world into a biological desert.”

The banning of DDT may have been more than just altruistic behavior. Peter Mathiessen in Wildlife in America wrote: “The recognition of man’s own vulnerability to a poisoned environment was only one of several factors that expanded the conservationists’ concerns from a small number of celebrated birds and mammals to the whole range of living things…”

Regardless of why DDT was banned, bald eagles began to show reproductive improvements almost immediately. In the Yellowstone National Park ecosystem, the number of breeding pairs increased from 30 to 50 in just 10 years after the ban. Only half of the nests were successful prior to the DDT ban in Minnesota’s Chippewa National Forest, but in the 1980s the number of successful nests rose to 80%

Unfortunately, DDT is still popular in parts of the world where its use is still legal. In Texas and New Mexico, for instance, starlings have higher concentrations of DDT in their system than they did just a few years ago. The source of the DDT is knot known. 

While the use of DDT has been banned in the U.S., some pesticides still produced and used in the U.S. contain large quantities of DDT as a production by-product (and are therefore uncontrolled).

Lead poisoning.
Bald eagles feed on carrion and will take waterfowl that are injured or diseased. A duck that has been injured during the hunting season with lead shot will likely become a meal for an eagle. In the process of consuming the duck the eagle is likely to ingest the lead pellets from the body of a duck. This can lead to lead poisoning.

Eagles can be affected in a number of ways by lead poisoning. They can die outright from ingesting too much. They can also consume enough to become impaired, so much so that it is unable to pursue and capture enough prey to stay alive. In this case the bird is likely to die of starvation. 

The third way is the lead causes impaired physical responses, and the bird is unable to avoid life-threatening situations, like moving out of the way of a vehicle.

The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service began a phased-in ban on the use of lead shot beginning in 1987 after they were sued by the National Wildlife Foundation for failure to protect the bald eagle from the dangers of lead shot. In 1994 34% of the eagles admitted to the University of Minnesota’s Raptor Center still had symptoms of lead poisoning and over half had detectable traces in their bodies.

Other poisons.
Even though the organochlorines, such as DDT, have been banned, poisonings still occur with replacement pesticides. In 1994, an adult bald eagle was found near the southwestern Wisconsin community of Grantsburg suffering from organophosphate poisoning. The bird was rehabilitated and released near Fargo, North Dakota, but was found dead of a second organophosphate poisoning just two miles from the scene of the original poisoning a year later. Still, organophosphates, which replaced the organochlorines, are safer since they have shorter life spans and therefore do not bioaccumulate at the same rate as the organochlorines.

Carbofuran has also been implicated in the death of eagles. Carbofuran is used to kill nematodes that destroy the roots of some crops such as corn and rice and is implicated in the death of thousands of birds (including eagles). Virginia banned the use of the insecticide after the poisoning of an eagle and its chick. Carbofuran was also implicated in the poisoning of 17 eagles in northwestern Wisconsin in 1994.

Another hydrocarbon, PCB, a solvent used in some industrial applications and in transformers, has been shown to cause birth defects in newly hatched cormorants along the Great Lakes coastline. Alarmingly, eagles living along Minnesota and Wisconsin’s Lake Superior shoreline have 5-10 times the PCBs in their systems as eagles nesting just a few miles inland and they have lower nesting success than their inland-nesting cousins. 

While the number of eagle pairs has increased along the shore of Minnesota and Wisconsin’s Lake Superior shoreline, these new pairs may be forming from inland birds. As of yet, however, there isn’t a conclusive study to indicate a direct link between reproductive problems and high levels of PCBs in eagles.

The exact path that PCBs take in the food chain is unknown, since the Lake Superior eagles do not feed much on lake trout, the initial suspect. It may be that PCBs are bio-accumulating in gulls, which scavenge dead lake trout that wash up on shore. Eagles may then acquire the toxin whey they prey upon the gulls.

Habitat Interference
Obvious as well as subtle changes in the environment have destroyed habitat so that less space is available for eagles to exist. 

Cutting of nesting, roosting and perching trees has been going on since the first white settlers arrived in North America, and still continues today. While the eagle has been protected for many years it wasn’t until 1978 that the eagles “critical habitat” was afforded the same protection. This habitat is no longer open to destruction.

Development of waterfront property is one of the most destructive activities that humans have leveled at the bald eagle. Conflicts with humans on shoreline habitat are intense, with the eagle being the loser. Many eagles have been driven off of their nests because of commercial and recreational activities too close to their shorelines.

Clear-cutting of forests has decimated the tall, old trees that eagles typically use for roosting, perching and nesting. The poor harvesting practices also have caused run-offs into lakes, rivers and streams that support the eagle. Additionally, high sediment loads in the water create poor habitat for the fish that are necessary for the eagle to feed on.

The construction of the lock and dams on the Mississippi originally changed the prey species in the river to the detriment of the eagle but now, the lock and dams are favorite spots for the eagle to fish and to feed.

Habitat needs for an eagle include all of the components of the environment that an eagle needs to survive and reproduce. This means more than just forests and shorelines, it includes the amount of prey available, the amount of isolation present as well as many other components.

Disturbance
Human disturbance has a number of variables which make it difficult to determine if one form is more detrimental than another. 

For instance the type of activity and distance from the nest both influence responses of adult birds. Also the stage at which nesting occurs, the weather, and the duration of the disturbance may play a role with other conditions. Once these variables are teamed with the individual personalities and tolerance levels of a particular pair of eagles it becomes difficult to determine the effect any one form of disturbance may have on nesting success. 

By far a greater threat to the eagle is the man-made contaminants introduced to the natural world. Eventually these pollutants move through the food chain and concentrate in the base of the food web, typically fish. When eagles feed on fish they are eating concentrated amounts of whatever pollutants have been absorbed by the fish.

Changes in Prey
A little-studied aspect of bald eagle problems is the vast reduction of wildlife species that served as prey for the bald eagle. Studies indicate that survival and increased reproductive success is based on the abundance of food. As humans destroy and deplete aquatic foods and other prey sources, the eagle has more difficulty finding an adequate meal. 

Because of their diverse diet, as well as their scavenging feeding patterns, bald eagles have been able to adapt to many changes in their prey base - but this has also led to humans believing that the eagle is competition for food sources, leading them to regard the eagle as vermin.

Other Causes of Death
Eagles are also killed or injured by ingesting fishing lures and hooks found imbedded in their prey. This is particularly prevalent in the south along the seacoast. It is not difficult to imagine a fish escaping its immediate danger by breaking the fisherman’s line, only to die later from its injuries or exhaustion and floating to the surface to be snagged by an eagle, along with a hook or lure. (Eagles have also died or been injured after ingesting lead fishing weights or becoming entangled in discarded fishing line.)

Nearly one-fourth of bald eagle deaths are attributed to trauma, such as collisions with vehicles, power lines and other structures. 

Gunshot injuries account for 15% of deaths, and poisonings account for an additional 16% deaths (including lead poisonings). Electrocution takes fewer bald eagles than golden eagles, but 12% of known bald eagle deaths still occur when eagles alight on power structures, and with their large wingspan cover  the distance between a hot line and a ground.

While the conservation of bald eagles has succeeded, the bald eagle should be looked at as a species relatively easy to save when compared to many other endangered species. Eagles are large, powerful birds, and like other charismatic mega-fauna, they are relatively easy to like for most people. They also have a wide historic range,and  they are easy to identify (at least as adults). The eagle is also the US National Bird which creates strong affinity for many individuals, as well as groups such as veterans.

The major threat before the 40s was shooting and habitat loss, but this was successfully combated using education programs and legal protections. After the mid 40s, the major threat eagles faced was DDT. Once legislation prohibited its use in Canada and the United States in the early 1970s, the bald eagle population climbed rapidly from a low of about 500 nesting pairs in 1963 to over 4,000 pairs in the continental US by 1993. 

Another 20-25,000 pairs exist in Alaska and Canada.

360 Degree Tours 

 





The NEC is an official
Great River Road
Interpretive Center

 

 

 

Home   |  Donate   |  Join   |  Contact Us   |   Hours & Admission   |   Volunteer   |   FAQ's   |   Directions
Photo Contest      Exhibits   |   Site Map  |  Search   |  Admin   |    Calendar   |    I found an Eagle   Donate Fish
© 2007 National Eagle Center
50 Pembroke Ave, Wabasha MN 55981
Fostering environmental stewardship through eagle and Mississippi River education.
www.nationaleaglecenter.org
651.565.4989      
information@nationaleaglecenter.org       877.332.4537
All images copy written © and may not be used without permission.