The Mercury News

Survey: Bald eagle numbers have soared

- By Anna M. Phillips

The number of bald eagles — a species that once came dangerousl­y close to extinction — in the United States has more than quadrupled over the past dozen years despite massive declines in overall bird population­s, government scientists announced this week.

A new survey by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that since 2009, when the last count was taken, the number of eagles had soared to an estimated 316,700 in the lower 48 states. At the species’ lowest point in the 1960s, there were fewer than 500 nesting pairs in those states.

Though bald eagles have been steadily recovering, the latest figures surprised even scientists who study avian population­s.

At a news conference Tuesday, Interior Secretary Deb Haaland celebrated the findings as evidence that species vulnerable to extinction can be rescued by government interventi­on, a departure from President Donald Trump’s administra­tion’s efforts to significan­tly weaken the Endangered Species Act.

Although the bald eagle was removed from the endangered list in 2007, conservati­onists credit much of the population’s recovery to de

cades of protection from federal regulation­s that made it illegal to hunt the birds.

“I know that the previous administra­tion took steps to undermine key provisions of the Endangered Species Act,” Haaland said. “We will be taking a close look at all of those revisions and considerin­g what steps to take.”

Some of the increase may be due to the Fish and Wildlife Service’s new method of counting the birds. The agency long has used aerial surveys to monitor the species, but its latest update includes crowdsourc­ed data from the online ornitholog­ical database eBird.

About 180,000 birdwatche­rs around the nation reported their bald eagle sightings to the database, said Amanda Rodewald, senior director for avian population studies at the Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y, which maintains eBird. Those sightings provided government scientists with an entirely new view of the species, particular­ly in parts of the country that aren’t easily surveyed from above.

Though there’s no way to know for sure how much of the growth is because of the crowdsourc­ed data, said Brian Millsap, national raptor coordinato­r for the Fish and Wildlife Service, the latest estimates line up with other survey data. “While the eBird data has improved the estimates, the vast majority of this increase really is attributed to bald eagle population growth,” he said.

There were once thought to be as many as half a million bald eagles in North America, but hunting, habitat destructio­n and DDT poisoning put the species’ survival in doubt. By 1963, only 417 mating pairs were documented in the lower 48 states.

The species was added to the list of threatened and endangered species in 1967.

When the federal government released its last population estimate, which used data from 2009, there were believed to be just over 72,400 birds.

In recent years, the booming eagle population has led the birds to increasing­ly take up residence in more urban areas.

A pair of bald eagles nested in a pine tree on the side of Highway 39 in the San Gabriel Mountains in 2019, drawing crowds of enthusiast­ic and sometimes overly aggressive bird watchers. That year, about 200 “urban eagles” found a home in Seattle suburbs, where they created a headache for residents who accused the birds of dropping trash scavenged from a nearby landfill into their yards.

 ?? BRUCE BENNETT GETTY IMAGES ?? An American bald eagle flies over Mill Pond in 2018 in Centerport, N.Y.
BRUCE BENNETT GETTY IMAGES An American bald eagle flies over Mill Pond in 2018 in Centerport, N.Y.

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