Photo of the Day

Bald Eagle at Nest
The arrival of arctic air and sub-freezing temperatures reminds us that winter is soon here.  But for this Bald Eagle, preparations for spring are already underway.  Pairs nesting in the lower Susquehanna valley have begun courtship and many females will be incubating eggs in January.  By March, parents will be bringing food to hungry nestlings.  The timing of the Bald Eagle’s breeding cycle provides the best chances for an adequate supply of provisions for their young.  Their peak demand for food coincides with the arrival of thousands of migrating waterfowl and other birds and with the migration of suckers and other fish on local streams.  From these massive legions of migrants, adult eagles cull the weak and vulnerable, or scavenge the carcasses of those that have already perished.  Bald Eagles in Florida and elsewhere in the south have a nesting schedule with similar benefits; their young are hatching now to fed by parents taking advantage of the immense numbers of waterfowl and other birds presently arriving to spend the winter there.

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