Myakka

Myakka was hatched at the G.M. Sutton Avian Research Center, Bartlesville, Oklahoma as part of an effort to re-establish a wild bald eagle population in Alabama. After a successful release, Myakka was injured in the wild by a gunshot. At a rehab center in Minneapolis it was discovered that he had sustained permanent damage to one eye and could no longer be released, since he could no longer hunt successfully. He was received at the World Bird Sanctuary in September 1986. Myakka has since appeared before hundreds of thousands of people in our programs. In his travels he has appeared in such venues as: Grant's Farm, Eagle Day programs in Iowa, Illinois and Missouri, Milwaukee County Zoo, Zoo Atlanta, Mystic Aquarium in Mystic Connecticut, and Clarksville Nature Center at Clarksville, MO. Your adoption fee will help feed, house and care for Myakka in the coming year.

 


Adoption Fee $150
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Bald Eagle

Haliaeetus leucocephalus


Description large; white head, neck and tail; brown-black body; massive yellow bill and feet
Sex males and females are similar but females are larger
Age juveniles are mostly dark brown with white blotches underneath and on the wing linings; become more white each molt; gain adult plumage after 4-5 years; immature calls are generally harsher
Length 31-37"
Wingspan 5.8-7.5'
Weight 8-14 lbs.
Habitat rivers, lakes, coastal areas
Status seen across most of North America; common in Alaska, parts of Florida and in the Midwest during winter months; common along the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers in winter; became endangered in the 70s from pesticides; conservation programs and pesticide banning helped increase populations again
Range Alaska and Canada to the southern United States
Behavior monogamous pairs; breed April-August and build a stick nest as high as 150 feet above the ground, usually in a tree or on cliffs near water; renovate and add to their nest each year until it falls; 1 brood with 1-3 dull, whitish eggs; both parents incubate for 34-36 days until semi-altricial chicks hatch asynchronously; chicks leave nest at 10 weeks; large numbers of bald eagles often congregate where food is plentiful, like spawning ruts; will steal food from smaller and weaker osprey; fly low after prey
Diet carrion, fish, waterfowl, birds, small mammals
Vocalization sharp, pleading, creaking cackle; "kleek-kik-ik-ik-ik"
Other Information - The Bald Eagle has been the national symbol of the United States since 1782