BirdLife: The Magazine April-June 2019 | Page 29

MIGRATION: A FLIGHT FOR SURVIVAL he beautiful plumage of the Eastern Imperial Eagle Aquila heliaca reflects its regal name. With gold- flecked feathers and a golden crown, it builds nests at the tops of trees, which reach a magnificent size as they reuse and renovate them year after year. Perched upon their high vantage points, they look like royalty sat on a throne. Equipped with a thick, hooked bill, sharp talons, keen eyes and a wingspan that can stretch over two metres, the bird can access quite a menu, from ground squirrels, hares and hamsters to more formidable quarry such as foxes and snakes. The eagle’s mighty power not only enables it to conquer its prey, but facilitates a remarkable migration. Adults in central Europe, the Balkan Peninsula, Turkey and the Caucasus are usually residents and do not migrate. However, a few juveniles do travel to southern wintering grounds, returning in spring. Some of these birds fly an incredible distance - travelling as far as 8,000 km in just a few weeks. But even the mighty have their Achilles heel and for these eagles, that downfall is humans. The Eastern Imperial Eagle is in decline, currently classed by BirdLife as Vulnerable. For central European populations, the biggest human threat they face is poisoning – whether accidental or intentional. Some farmers use legal pesticides to rid their fields of small, crop-destroying rodents, and eagles that feed upon this prey unwittingly ingesting a dose of poison. This poison can render eagles infertile, or accumulate in their bodies and lead to death. More devastatingly, Eastern Imperial Eagles (among other predators) are sometimes directly targeted with illegal T EASTERN IMPERIAL EAGLE FACT FILE WINGSPAN: 180-215 CM TOP SPEED: 80 KM/H THREATS: POISONING, SHOOTING, POWERLINES APR-JUN 2019 • BIRDLIFE In Central Europe, most Eastern Imperial Eagles are sedentary, though some juveniles head as far as Africa to overwinter. In early spring, they travel up to 8000 km back across the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to reach their continent of birth. EASTERN IMPERIAL EAGLE MIGRATION ROUTE poisons by poachers and gamekeepers. The aim, in what is known as predator persecution, is to decrease the number of game species ending up in a raptor’s talons, rather than a hunter’s hand. Following poisoning, the second major threat to this species is electrocution from contact with powerlines. Increased felling of tall trees is adding to the risk, as eagles resort to perching and nesting on pylons. The only silver lining to this tragic situation is that the eagles are also open to accepting safe, artificial vantage points created by humans. This is one of many initiatives that give us cause for hope - because it’s not too late to save this species. In Hungary, home to a third of Europe’s breeding population, decades of dedicated work from MME (BirdLife in Hungary) have pulled the bird back from the brink. The population has recovered dramatically from 15-25 breeding pairs in the 1970s to roughly 200 pairs now. This is down to a multi-pronged approach including training sniffer dog units to detect the use of poison, operating a hotline for witnesses to report bird crimes, monitoring eagle numbers and creating a rehabilitation centre for injured eagles. On the back of this success, MME is now leading the PannonEagle Life project - a collaborative mission between Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Austria and Serbia. This will involve rolling out methods that have proven to be successful in Hungary across central Europe. The main aims will be greater enforcement of poisoning laws and increased conviction of those caught in the act. These efforts will be complimented by environmental education – for example, raising public awareness of the minimal impact raptors really have on game bird populations, in order to curb predator persecution. Overall, the project is expected to help central Europe’s Imperial Eagle population to exceed 250 breeding pairs by 2021. There is something sorrowful about seeing the mighty fall. The Eastern Imperial Eagle is so well-equipped for nature’s challenges, but not for the dangers posed by man. But the success of tried and tested methods in Hungary gives us great confidence that this species can be rescued globally. 29