Bald Eagles
spend over 90% of daylight hours perching in both winter and
summer. Some have been monitored for perching and have been found
to have perched, unmoving, for up to eighteen hours.
Perches have a
great significance to the eagle, but they are more flexible in
choosing perches than they are choosing roosting or nesting sites.
Perches allow eagles to loaf or rest and give the eagles a place
to hunt and forage from.
Many times they
will eat from the same branches that they’ve perched in. Eagles
can use guard or sentry perches as lookout points while watching
their nests, food, territory or young. Perches can also provide a
way to send messages to other eagles about occupied territory,
location of food or roosts or even willingness to mate.
Typically feeding perches will be within sight of the water or
even hanging over the water on exposed limbs. Sentry perches are
within easy sight of a nest or a roost. Feeding perches will many
times be in heavily forested areas out of the direct flight path.
This is to prevent or deter other eagles from stealing their food.
Cottonwood trees are widely used as perches along the Mississippi
River. Cottonwoods can reach great heights (sometimes 100 feet)
and taller ones referred to as “super canopy” trees. Eagles
will perch on other things, like rocks, riprap, driftwood, ice and
sometimes even fences, but they prefer natural perches.
Eagles will select the highest perch that can support their
weight. They almost always perch in the upper half of the tree and
if the branches are strong enough, the upper quarter. Relative to
the surrounding tree canopy the eagle will choose those perches
that tower above the surrounding trees.
Eagles like a
clear, unobstructed view of the territory they have just chosen to
perch in and will choose branches that are horizontal, thick and
easily accessible. Their large wingspan requires open areas for
landings and takeoffs.
Roosting
A roost is an
area where eagles will sleep during the night and rest or seek
shelter on inclement days. They may gather in large communal
roosts during the evening, but some birds remain on their daytime
perches all night. If the weather is particularly bad (high winds,
driving snow or rain) the eagles may choose to remain in the more
sheltered roosts all day.
Roosting habitat does not need to be close to water. They prefer
to have sources of prey nearby, but it is not critical for them.
More important to them is the shelter that this roost area
provides.
Eagles will
choose a roost for its protected “microclimate”. It typically
will have tall trees that rise above the canopy of trees, and it
will have clear views and open flight paths. In the winter many
birds may roost together in these sheltered areas. These roost
areas can contain just a few trees and attract only a few eagles
or have up to 100 trees and attract over 100 eagles.
These roost areas feature a weather pattern different than the
general weather of the day. This difference can be caused by
habitat and landform characteristics. The roost can be sheltered
when they occur in depressions, steep-sided valleys or on the
slopes of the lee side of a prevailing wind. Vegetation also helps
in protecting the eagle from unfavorable conditions. Conifers
provide much more protection from inclement weather than do
deciduous trees. High winds in a roost area have proven to
increase wind chill and can flush warm air from the roost lowering
the air temperature. Protection from rain and snow has proven less
important than protection against wind.
Studies have shown that eagles conserve energy by roosting in
protected habitat. An eagle can conserve as much as 5% of its
daily energy requirement by protecting itself from adverse weather
conditions. The death of an eagle as a result of the cold in
uncommon, but cold stress increases the demand for energy and
therefore the need for food. If the food is easy to get, a
cold-stressed bird simply eats more, but if prey is scarce, cold
stress and food stress can be a deadly combination.
Foraging
The foraging
habitat is the most necessary habitat used by bald eagles. It must
provide enough food consistently and have a minimal amount of
human disturbance. This habitat needs to have large, open areas
where prey can be killed and eaten. They prefer a wide visual
field and need open areas to take flight and land.
Eagles require a large amount of food and may cover hundreds of
miles in order to locate adequate supplies. This may mean that the
birds will congregate below lock and dams or hydroelectric plants
that have turbines churning the water. The turbines will stun or
kill the fish and provide an excellent meal for the opportunistic
eagle. Areas where there are large gatherings of waterfowl
typically yield those that are injured or ill. This, too provides
an excellent source of for the eagle.
Nesting
Nest sites are
always located near water. If trees near water are inadequate
eagles will sometimes move farther inland.
Usually the eagle will nest in a tree. Here along the Mississippi
River, eagles nest in cottonwoods. White pines are the choice in
northern Minnesota, Wisconsin and Canada. No matter what species
of tree is chosen it is almost always one of the tallest in the
surrounding forest. A tall tree allows adequate support of allows
adequate support of a large nest, and open flight path, and an
excellent surrounding view of the neighborhood.
Typically, eagles build their nests slightly below the treetop
with some tree foliage and branches above them. This might help
protect the adults and young from rain and sunlight. It is also
believed that those trees with cover require fewer repairs each
year because they are somewhat protected from the elements.
However, there are a few records of eagles nesting in dead trees.