In the 2011 trafficking case known as , a bald eagle carcass sold for $1,000. A single feather went for $500. The case took two years to close. Dan Rolince, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office ...
Now the feathers are really starting to fly in the trade war. A bald eagle was captured on film doing battle with a sickly, bird-flu-riddled Canada goose — in a stunning new viral image that is ...
from the nearby Crow Indian Reservation. Around his waist was a decorative piece strung with eagle feathers, and he carried a short wooden stick carved into a bald eagle head, a single feather hanging ...
Cold, snowy winters and rainy springs also dim young eaglets’ chances of survival. Bald eagle eggs typically have a 50-50 chance of hatching, according to Sandy Steers, biologist and executive ...