Last updated: October 18, 2024
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The summer movements of female Golden Eagle 1502 at the northwestern edge of North America.
To develop and implement effective and efficient conservation and management plans for migratory birds, we need to know how, where, and when they travel and how conditions across their range affect their ability to survive and to produce young. Currently, we are collaborating with US Geological Survey, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and Conservation Science Global, Inc., to quantify the year-round movements of Alaska’s migratory golden eagles. As part of that study, we captured Golden Eagle 1502 on 24 March 2015 near Big Grayling Lake on the southern slopes of the Mentasta Mountains in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park & Preserve and attached a 45-g satellite solar powered telemetry unit to her using a lightweight and durable harness. Based on her molt, we aged her as a second year. Since then we’ve monitored her movements remotely via the satellite telemetry unit that provides us with her location every hour daily from about 0700 to 1900 throughout the year. Because the telemetry unit batteries are charged via solar power, we do not obtain much data from her between November and late February because she most likely remains in Alaska for the winter.
Every telemetered eagle tells an important, and unique, story. Our telemetry studies continue to provide new information on the movements of non-territorial Golden Eagles in Alaska during the breeding season, expanding our understanding of the ecology of this species. This information should be useful for developing effective management and conservation strategies for this species in Alaska.
Please contact Carol McIntyre (e-mail us) if you have any questions about this eagle or our ongoing collaborative studies of eagle movements.
Learn more about our long-running ecological study of migratory Golden Eagles.