Mercury (Hobart) - Magazine

ON THE WING

- WITH DON KNOWLER

A flight of wedge-tailed eagles has been causing a fair amount of disquiet down the Channel south of Hobart. A dog-owning couple report that the eagles have been casting hungry eyes on their beloved pair of toy poodles.

The Birchs Bay residents contacted Craig Webb at the Raptor Refuge at Kettering for advice on how to keep their pooches safe, and he in turn referred the pressing matter to wildlife biologist Nick Mooney, an eagle expert with some wise words about both eagles and keeping dogs safe from attack.

The couple said two and sometimes three eagles had been “hunting” their toy poodles.

A neighbour had been feeding the eagles with roadkill and the problem started once the neighbour moved and the eagles found themselves without this steady source of food. Their attention turned to the poodles.

“The eagles have seriously increased their hunting, so much so we can’t let the dogs outside at any time without one of us checking the sky and the surroundin­g trees,” the couple wrote. “They also hunt our dogs when my husband takes them for a walk on a lead by flying from tree to tree and swooping down. We feel it’s only a matter of time before the eagles have a poodle dinner.”

Mooney replied that the eagles indeed did sometimes took small dogs, if they could manage a surprise attack. He said he also knew of ongoing wars between large dogs and wedgies over carrion, and told a story of a farmer friend finding his blue heeler hiding from an eagle under the farmer’s ute. The eagle was pacing around, after chasing the dog off a dead wallaby.

Eagles might not only be looking for a quick meal in their interactio­n with dogs. “Often male eagles put on a display to impress females. They might do uncharacte­ristic things such as attacking things they wouldn’t normally,” Mooney said.

There also was the issue of young males from the previous breeding season starting to have to fend for themselves when the parents had stopped feeding them. “Some get desperate because the parents have often stopped feeding them,” he addsed “They might hang about with them but increasing­ly they get shunned because the next breeding season is coming.”

Mooney suggested dog owners displayed aggressive behaviour towards eagles if they threatened their dogs.

“Keep something loud handy. A handheld fog horn — not expensive at boat shops — works. It’s important the eagles learn you are bad news. Teach them a bit of fear. Bang on a bucket, anything to stir them along. It can work surprising­ly well since everything they do involves risk assessment.”

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