New York Post

ROVER'S 'BEAK' IN TOWN

- By HANNAH FRISHBERG

It’s the squawk of the town. On Monday, for the first time in nearly two years, local celebrity Rover the bald eagle was spotted soaring above the Central Park Reservoir.

“Shortly after I passed the [park’s] North Gatehouse at 3:50 p.m., I saw an adult bald eagle flying low and repeatedly circling over the northwest corner of the reservoir,” David Barrett, creator and manager of the Manhattan Bird Alert account on X, told The Post.

“I was thrilled, as this had to be Rover!”

The well-regarded raptor was a reservoir regular in 2022, frequently spotted hunting sea gulls and other creatures in the park. He’s identified by a distinctiv­e “R7” banding tag he was given by the Connecticu­t Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection after hatching in New Haven in 2018.

Birders celebrate

Avian adorers are saluting his homecoming.

“Rover the Bald Eagle returned this morning to one of his favorite dining destinatio­ns, the Central Park Reservoir,” birder Caren Jahre wrote alongside a photo of Rover.

After posing for Jahre’s photo, Rover went on to catch a gull in flight, kill it and eat it while perched in a tree by the reservoir, other birders reported.

The bald eagle’s return is a great sign for his species, which neared extinction in the 1970s before conservati­on efforts, including pesticide bans, brought them back from the brink.

In 1976, it was estimated that there was just one pair of bald eagles left in New York state. Now, there are about 400 pairs, according to NYC Audubon spokespers­on Andrew Maas.

“We are proud to see bald eagles like Rover increasing­ly embracing the city and showing how far New York City has come in terms of improving its environmen­t for birds and people,” Maas told The Post.

As for Rover’s absence, Barrett believes the bird relocated upstate, living and breeding somewhere north of the city, along the Hudson River, these past two years.

When cold weather causes upstate water bodies to freeze, many birds fly south, Barrett explained. “The recent cold snap likely made Rover go on a trip back to his old hunting grounds.”

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 ?? ?? FLY GUY: For the first time since 2022, Rover the eagle is spotted in Central Park.
FLY GUY: For the first time since 2022, Rover the eagle is spotted in Central Park.

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