Gość: A.D.
IP: *.mco.bellsouth.net
07.07.03, 00:43
>> Zastanawiajace! W Narodowym Zoo, gdzie tylko klatki z Bushem brakuje do
kompletu, okazuje sie ze zdechl 'Bald eagle' - lysy orzel, ktory dzieki temu
ze przepada za padlina, jest symbolem Ameryki. Czyzby to 'Najwyzszy' dal nam
znak?
Bald Eagle Is Found Dead at National Zoo
Sunday July 6, 2003 10:09 PM
By CANDACE SMITH
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Officials at the National Zoo suspect that a large cat got
into a bald eagle's enclosure and killed the bird, perhaps already weakened
by fierce storms and unable to fly.
It is the latest in a series of animal deaths at the zoo.
The male eagle died Friday morning, the same day that the zoo celebrated a
new exhibit designed especially for bald eagles hurt in the wild.
The dead eagle was housed separately from the zoo's two new eagles that were
donated by American Eagle Foundation based at singer Dolly Parton's
Dollywood theme park in Pigeon Forge, Tenn.
The 21-year-old eagle, found by a zookeeper early Thursday, had severe
puncture wounds to his abdomen and back, spokeswoman Julie Mason said.
Zookeepers suspect a large cat crept into the cage and attacked the eagle,
who could have been injured during Wednesday night's fierce rain storms.
``It very likely is a bobcat, but we haven't for a 100 percent identified it
as a bobcat, but I think we're leaning toward that,'' said Bill Xanten, zoo
general curator.
Xanten believes the eagle could not fly and the cat took advantage of the
situation.
``Under ordinary circumstances, I find it really hard to believe that a cat
would take on a full grown bald eagle,'' added Xanten.
The eagles are about 29 inches to 42 inches long, can weigh up to 15 pounds,
and have a wing span of up to 8 feet, making them one of the largest birds
in North America.
Park police took casts of paw prints in the bird's exhibit, which is about
24 feet high, 40 feet long and 15 feet deep. Experts were looking at the
casts and planned to study the bite patterns on the bird, Xanten said. They
also set up cameras and traps using fish as bait inside the bird cage,
hoping to catch the predator.
Small feral cats, attracted by the eagle's fish meal, had been in the
exhibit before, but there were no problems, Xanten said.
The zoo is in Rock Creek Park and bobcats can be found in Maryland and
Virginia, Xanten added.
The death comes shortly before the start of an independent review, conducted
at the request of Congress, into recent animal deaths at the zoo.
A bald eagle died last year after becoming infected with the West Nile
virus. Two red pandas that ate rat poison died in January and two zebras
starved to death in January 2000. There has been at least a dozen other
deaths including a lion, orangutan and elephant.
Al Cecere, president of the foundation that previously cared for the zoo's
newest bald eagles, said Sunday he was not worried about the birds' safety.
``Whenever you have an organization that cares for literally hundreds of
animals you're going to have some deaths on occasion,'' Cecere said. ``It's
just sad that that happened, especially on the Fourth of July.''
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