Once again, a land of eagles: once bordering on extinction, our national symbol is making a soaring comeback in forests nationwide.In the aftermath of September 11, national symbols took on a whole new meaning. Flags sprouted from car windows, strip malls, and politicians' lapels. Americans sang the national anthem and "God Bless America" with fervor, and an American bald eagle bald eagle Species of sea eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) that occurs inland along rivers and large lakes. Strikingly handsome, it is the only eagle native solely to North America, and it has been the U.S. national bird since 1782. The adult, about 40 in. gilded gild 1 tr.v. gild·ed or gilt , gild·ing, gilds 1. To cover with or as if with a thin layer of gold. 2. To give an often deceptively attractive or improved appearance to. 3. into Yankee Stadium • • [ before Game 3 of the World Series. The national bird, majestically soaring across skies in the lower 48 states and in Alaska, is a fitting symbol for the resilience that has marked the American people An American people may be:
But despite their comeback, eagles face a multitude of threats. The biggest is development, which continues to destroy the tall trees For the Hotel in Teesside see Hotel tall trees Tall Trees is a nightclub located on Tolcarne Road in Newquay, Cornwall, United Kingdom. The club has been voted as number 1 club in the south west for the last two years running by the Ministry of Sound magazine they favor for their nests. Habitat restoration and preservation are key to continued success. AMERICAN FORESTS American Forests is a nonprofit conservation organization that promotes healthy forests and urban tree planting. The organization was established in 1875 as the American Forestry Association, by physician/horticulturist John Aston Warder and a group of like-minded citizens is pitching in with Global ReLeaf tree-planting projects in areas that eagles call home. Projects in Delaware, California, Kansas, Wyoming, and other spots across the nation will help ensure the eagle's continued prosperity. A SOARING COMEBACK AMERICAN FORESTS has planted 19,950 pines and oaks to reduce runoff, expand habitat and benefit balds at Eastern Neck National Wildlife Refuge National Wildlife Refuge along the Chesapeake Bay Chesapeake Bay, inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, c.200 mi (320 km) long, from 3 to 30 mi (4.8–48 km) wide, and 3,237 sq mi (8,384 sq km), separating the Delmarva Peninsula from mainland Maryland. and Virginia. on Maryland's Eastern Shore. The project was planted in partnership with Exxon Mobil. "No matter how many I see, I still love to see bald eagles, and I see them everyday," says refuge manager Martin Kaehny. Eastern Neck has four active nests. Further inland, Tom Miller, ranger for Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1933 as a waterfowl sanctuary for birds migrating along the critical migration highway called the Atlantic Flyway. The Refuge is located on Maryland's scenic Eastern Shore, just 12 miles south of Cambridge, Maryland in , says bald eagles are the prime attraction for the refuge's visitors. "It's a very beautiful bird . . . [and] a fierce looking predator. I think people are drawn to that sort of thing." he says. Marylander Meme Wells-Susnavick has watched eagles over the years at Blackwater and around her home. "To be out in the wild and hear the distinct call. . . it makes anyone stop and take notice," she says. When you talk about the American eagle and it being the American bird, I think it's a fascination for anybody. . . school-age child or adult." When Bruce Freske sees 20 to 30 eagles winter at the Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) is located 39 miles (63 km) south of the Kansas City metropolitan area, along the Marais des Cygnes River. The 7,500 acre (30 km²) Refuge was established in 1992 to protect one of the northwestern-most examples of bottomland hardwood in Kansas, he is not only fascinated, he is impressed. The manager of the refuge, which contains mostly bottomland hardwood forests and is run by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, says he has never seen such a large eagle population. "They're at historic highs," Freske says. "There are probably more eagles here than there were at the turn of the century." Freske hopes to see even more in the future. A recent Global ReLeaf project on the refuge planted 60,000 oaks, pecans, shagbark hickories, and sycamores on a former pasture. Now nearly five years old, the trees have done most of their growing underground, in the root structure. But down the road, those trees will grow into the kinds of large trees that eagles prefer when it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a to lay eggs, and Marais des Cygnes Marais des Cygnes (mĕr`ē də sēn), river, c.140 mi (230 km) long, rising in E central Kans., SW of Topeka, and flowing SE into W Mo. to join the Little Osage River and form the Osage River. might just see summer-time nesting pairs as well. Talk of an expanding eagle population would have seemed outrageous mere decades ago. The American Eagle Foundation estimates that bald eagle numbers in what would become the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. may once have been as high as 500,000. But populations began a fast dec1ine with the onset of European colonization. Hunting, pollution, and habitat destruction took their toil and eagle numbers continued to drop through the 19th and early 20th centuries. Today, an eagle sighting takes the breath away; not tat long ago it looked as if the actions of humans would take the eagles away. Bald eagles got their first big break with the passage of the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act in 1940. The act prohibited the taking, possession, sale, purchase, transport, export, or import of any bald eagle, eagle part, or egg. The law stopped the most flagrant attacks on eagles, but the birds were far from safe. Habitat destruction continued, and a new enemy was discovered: DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. . In the 1960s it was learned that the chemical insecticide, widely used in the United States, caused peregrine falcons to lay thin-shell eggs that often were crushed by the nesting adults. This effect, which occurred after the birds ate smaller animals that had ingested in·gest tr.v. in·gest·ed, in·gest·ing, in·gests 1. To take into the body by the mouth for digestion or absorption. See Synonyms at eat. 2. DDT, was soon also found in eagles. The use of DDT in the U.S. was banned in 1972, but the outlook for eagles remained grim: Fewer than 400 nesting pairs remained in the lower 48 states. The first signs of recovery came with the advent of stricter protection laws. In 1973, the American bald eagle became one of the first species listed as endangered under the new Endangered Species Act The federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA) (16 U.S.C.A. §§ 1531 et seq.) was enacted to protect animal and plant species from extinction by preserving the ecosystems in which they survive and by providing programs for their conservation. . Al Cecere, founder and president of the nonprofit American Eagle Foundation, says the ESA 1. (architecture) ESA - Enterprise Systems Architecture. 2. (body) ESA - European Space Agency. was important because it extended protection to eagle habitat, something the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act did not do. "One of the major benefits for the eagle in its recovery has been strict laws protecting eagles and their habitat," Cecere says. "The protection was so strict in so many areas that it gave the eagle what it needed to make a comeback." And come back it did. Cecere estimates that there are now 6,000 nesting pairs in the lower 48 states, up more than 1,500 percent from their lowest levels. Miller, from the Blackwater refuge in Maryland, says the recovery is an additional draw for eagle watchers. "So much publicity and so much effort has been put into bringing them back, I think that's one thing that really gets people into them," he says. CONTINUED VIGILANCE The eagles were doing so well that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service downgraded them to threatened status in 1995. Four years later, the USFWS USFWS United States Fish and Wildlife Service announced a proposal to delist the species entirely. The process has dragged on as experts study how best to protect eagles under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act, but Cecere says the time is right. "The ESA was designed to recover species," he says. "At some point, you've got to send your kids off to college and see how they do." Under the Act, a delisted species must be monitored for at least five years to ensure that no new threats emerge. Cecere calls this continued observation a key part of the delisting process. "Just because a species is taken off the list, that doesn't mean somebody won't be keeping an eye on it," he says. "it's not like we're just throwing the eagle out into the wild totally on its own." Willie Fitzgerald, a wildlife biologist at the Bureau of Land Management's Casper Field Office in Wyoming, agrees that vigilance will be required. The Casper area, site of an AMERICAN FORESTS' Wildfire ReLeaf project that reforested a burned area with more than 31,000 ponderosa pine ponderosa pine pinusponderosa. , is home to a dozen bald eagle winter roosting sites. The eagles tend to roost in huge ponderosas in northeast-facing canyons among the hills that dot Wyoming's mile-high prairies. Fitzgerald said these areas will have to be watched carefully after delisting, so that when the eagles glide majestically back to Wyoming each winter they don't find their habitat destroyed. "We have land-use decisions that protect the winter roost sites. It's possible over the long term that the land-use decisions would be changed," he says. "The justification was due in large part to [the eagle] being a threatened species." HABITAT AND DEVELOPMENT Habitat protection is perhaps the most important issue the USFWS will have to settle before delisting the eagle. Cecere says he is concerned the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act does not protect the habitat areas around eagle nests as the ESA does. "[The BAGEPA] is a very good law," he says. "The only problem is it didn't address protecting eagle habitat, nesting territory around a nest. Technically, somebody could go right up to a nesting tree and develop." The issue is especially crucial because habitat continues to be threatened by development. Al Rizzo, who coordinates the fish and wildlife partnership at the USFWS's Chesapeake Bay Field Office, says that highways, infrastructure, sprawl, and even agriculture continue to destroy the tall trees near water supplies favored by eagles for nesting. To combat such habitat loss, Rizzo's office is pursuing an aggressive reforestation Reforestation The reestablishment of forest cover either naturally or artificially. Given enough time, natural regeneration will usually occur in areas where temperatures and rainfall are adequate and when grazing and wildfires are not too frequent. policy throughout Delaware, which has lost a sizable portion of its biodiversity, due in large part to deforestation deforestation Process of clearing forests. Rates of deforestation are particularly high in the tropics, where the poor quality of the soil has led to the practice of routine clear-cutting to make new soil available for agricultural use. . Using two Global ReLeaf grants, the USFWS, along with the Delaware Forest Service and the National Resources Conservation Service, has planted more than 225,000 trees statewide. The plantings, which are continuing this year, create wooded buffers along streams and agricultural ditches. The project also helps tie together patches of forested land. Rizzo supports the "conservation corridors" called for in the 2002 Farm Bill, a similar concept that will allow eagles to travel throughout the state in forested areas, moving among the bodies of water and fish populations they try to stay near. "[We are creating] a landscape portrait that will ultimately develop into eagle habitat," Rizzo says. "[We will] try to maintain some unbroken forest corridors for them." Rizzo's focus on habitat is echoed by his colleagues across the country. Freske, of Marais des Cygnes in Kansas, says the very existence of the refuge, which was created in 1992, helps eagles. "Previous to [1992] the forests would be logged," he says. "The bald eagles need large, mature trees, especially for nesting. Now that we don't allow logging, we're going to allow trees to mature." Dave Ross, a forestry technician at California's Klamath National Forest Klamath National Forest is a 1,726,000 acre (6985 km²) national forest in northern California, with a tiny extension into Oregon. The forest contains continuous stands of ponderosa pine, Jeffrey pine, Douglas fir, red fir, white fir and incense cedar. , agrees. He oversaw a recent Global ReLeaf project at the Three Sisters Bald Eagle Winter Roost that planted more than 33,000 ponderosa pines in partnership with retailer Coldwater Creek. Ross said the continental United States' largest winter roost needs replacement trees for the eagles. "Long term, they have to he old-growth type trees," Ross says. "The few trees we have are practically dying off. The idea is [the new trees] will be habitat in the long term." Cecere says we need to realize the damage humans can do to the magnificent eagles and their habitat and change our practices accordingly. "All of the places eagles select for nesting and foresting are places we tend to want recreated," he says. "We need to make people aware that we're sharing these rivers and lakes and streams and oceans with the eagle and other wildlife, so we need to enjoy ourselves in a way that won't be a detriment to animals like the eagle." Despite potential setbacks and the need for continued vigilance, all agree that the eagles are back and will continue to recover. "AS long as there's not any major catastrophes down the line," Cecere says, "I would guess that the eagle's recovery will continue." That's good news for all Americans. ARKANSAS Bayou Bartholomew: 559,727 trees Cache River: 94,000 trees Little River Conservation District Demo Project: 5,000 trees Pointe Remove Wildlife Management Area (WMA (Windows Media Audio) An audio compression method from Microsoft. Known originally as MSAudio, this proprietary format competes with the MP3 and AAC methods. WMA encodes rapidly and is known to be especially effective at low bit rates. ): 131,600 trees CALIFORNIA Afton Canyon: 15,650 trees California Oaks Foundation (multiple sites): 10,000 trees Tahoe National Forest Tahoe National Forest is a U.S. National Forest located in California around Lake Tahoe. External link
Three Sisters Bald Eagle Winter Roost: 33,650 trees DELAWARE Delaware Riparian riparian adj. referring to the banks of a river or stream. (See: riparian rights) : 226,850 trees FLORIDA Ocklawaha Prairie Conservation Area: 190,000 trees GEORGIA Dawson Forest: 44,000 trees KANSAS Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge (NWR NWR National Wildlife Refuge NWR NOAA Weather Radio NWR National Wildlife Reserve NWR North West Region NWR Not Work Related NWR Network Wavelength Requirement NWR Not Worth Reporting NWR Nuclear Weapons Report ): 60,000 trees KENTUCKY Sloughs WMA: 32,375 trees MARYLAND Eastern Neck NWR: 19,950 trees MINNESOTA Pillsbury State Forest: 12,000 trees MISSISSIPPI St. Catherine Creek NWR: 372,460 trees NEW JERSEY Belleplain State Forest Belleplain State Forest is a 21,320 acre (86 km²) New Jersey State Forest in northern Cape May County and western Cumberland County. : 66,500 trees NORTH CAROLINA North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. Wicker Park: 4,300 trees OKLAHOMA Lindsay Landfill: 11,750 trees TEXAS Red River County: 116,000 trees WYOMING Casper/Little Red Creek Reforestation: 31,450 trees BRITISH COLUMBIA Highland Valley Copper: 66,485 trees An American bald eagle surveys the woods in a scene becoming more familiar across the United States. thanks in part to improved habitat. RELATED ARTICLE: Marais des Cygnes At Marais des Cygnes National Wildlife Refuge in Kansas, eagle populations are at "historic highs," according to the refuge manager A Global ReLeaf planting of 60,000 trees may help bring eagles there to nest as welt welt n. 1. A ridge or bump on the skin caused by a lash or blow or sometimes by an allergic reaction. 2. See wheal. The Chesapeake Bay Caption: AMERICAN FORESTS' Chesapeake ReLeaf plantings have benefited eagles at sites such as Eastern Neck National Wildlife Refuge in Maryland. At left, an adult bald eagle feeds a juvenile. Klamath National Forest Caption: One sure-bet for eagle watching is the Three Sisters Bald Eagle Winter Roost in Klamath National Forest, California. Three Sisters is the largest winter roost in the continental United States United States territory, including the adjacent territorial waters, located within North America between Canada and Mexico. Also called CONUS. . PLANTING A HABITAT FOR EAGLES Caption: AMERICAN FORESTS has planted more than 2 million trees for bald and golden eagle habitat in these locations: Charles Enloe is an intern at American Forests magazine. |
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