The eagle has been sighted
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Dave Brooks
Bird enthusiasts enjoyed a rare treat this weekend when a bald eagle
visited several natural areas along the Orange Coast.
The predatory bird was spotted as far inland as the Upper Newport
Bay and as far west as the Bolsa Chica Wetlands in Huntington Beach.
The bird, tagged “K13,” is said to be from a Catalina Island breeding
program looking to reintroduce the national symbol back into the
wild.
Bald eagles were once found in great numbers along the Southern
California coast and the Channel Islands, but massive residential and
commercial development, along with the introduction of several
pesticides, greatly reduced their numbers. Specifically DDT and DDE
have led to thinness in eagle eggs, making them break easily during
nesting.
The eagle was part of a managed program on the island, said Peter
Sharp of the Institute for Wildlife Studies. After eagles mate on
Catalina, their eggs are removed and shipped to a zoo in San
Francisco where they are incubated and monitored. Once hatched, the
eagles are then returned to the island within 10 days of birth. By
their eighth week, the eagles are placed in towers around the island,
where they live until they learn how to fly. K13 was believed to have
been released in 2001.
The eagle is said to be a male without a mate and estimated to
weigh between 8 to 9 pounds.
The bird has been spotted all over Huntington Beach, including in
a park near the Santa Ana River.
“I’ve seen him several times when I go to work,” said Jack
Sampson, who said he hopes the presence of the bird will convince the
Orange County Transportation District not to expand the Orange
Freeway along the Santa Ana River.
“I definitely plan to bring this up at one of the meetings,” he
said.
Eileen Murphy, who leads the annual Miracles of the Marsh wetlands
tour, said her group has spotted the bird several times in the lower
Bolsa Chica mesa.
It has become a regular sighting among visitors, she added.
“We saw him several times last week,” she said, but noted that she
didn’t spot the animal during a Tuesday tour of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands with a group of third-graders.
Sharp said the animal could be here to stay.
“We don’t really have much control over the bird’s behavior,” he
said. “If it chooses Orange County to be its home, then you’re lucky
enough to be stuck with him.”
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