Martial Eagle

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iMartial Eagle

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Genus: Polemaetus
Heine, 1890
Species: P. bellicosus
Binomial name
Polemaetus bellicosus
(Daudin, 1800)
Martial Eagle range
Martial Eagle range

The Martial Eagle (Polemaetus bellicosus), is Africa's largest eagle and is the only member of the genus Polemaetus.

Contents

[edit] Description

It is a large eagle, growing to a length of 76-83 cm with a wingspan of 190-260 cm. The adult's plumage has dark brown upperparts, head and upper chest. The body underparts are white streaked with black. The underwing coverts are brown, with pale flight feathers, also streaked with black. The female is usually larger and more streaked than the male. The immature is paler above and has white underparts. It reaches adult plumage in its seventh year.

[edit] Range and habitat

The Martial Eagle can be found in all subsaharan Africa, wherever food is abundant and the environment favourable. It is never common, but greater population densities exist in southern Africa, especially in Zimbabwe and South Africa. Generally, these birds are more abundant in protected areas, such as Kruger National Park and Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park in South Africa or Etosha National Park, in Namibia. Its preferred habitat is the semidesert and open savanna. It avoids dense forests but needs trees to nest in. The territory can vary greatly in size from more than 1000 Km² to areas where nests are less than 10 km distant. This disparity is due to differences in food supply.

Immature bird.
Enlarge
Immature bird.

[edit] Diet

The diet varies greatly with prey availability. Birds up to the size of a stork can be taken, but it chooses more often medium sized ground-dwelling species such as francolins, guineafowl or bustards. In some areas mammals constitute the greater part of its diet, with such species as hares, hyraxes, mongooses, and even young impalas. It can also attack domestic livestock, including poultry, lambs and young goats, but this is never a great part of its diet[1].

The Martial Eagle hunts mostly in flight, circling high above its territory, and stooping sharply to catch its prey by surprise.

[edit] Nesting

Martial Eagles have no distinctive display flight, but utter a loud cry `klee-klee-klee-kloeee-kloeee-kuleee' during the mating period. They build their nests in trees but also, in the Karoo desert(South Africa), on electric pylons [2]. The nest is a huge construction, used year after year, measuring 2 m diameter and 0.9 m depth. They have a slow reproduction rate, laying at the most one egg every two years. The egg is incubated for 45 days and the chick fledged at 100 days. After this, despite becoming independent, juvenile birds will remain close to the nest for another 6 months.

[edit] Conservation issues

This species suffers from persecution through shooting and poisoning, but also from indirect threats, such as collison with powerlines[2]. Another hazard is caused by steep sided farm reservoirs, in which many birds drown. In South Africa it may have lost 20% of its population in the last three generations[3]. In many areas where they come into contact with man, eagle populations have decreased greatly through persecution, because they are blamed for killing livestock. In reality, domestic animals constitute only a small proportion of their diet, whereas the presence of eagles is a sure sign of a healthy environment. The preservation of this species goes through education of farmers, and the direct protection of nesting sites.

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1] Regional variation in the diet of martial eagles in the Cape Province, South Africa. Boshoff, AF; Palmer, NG; Avery, G(1990).
  2. ^ a b Electric eagles of the Karoo, Koos De Goede and Andrew Jenkins(2001).
  3. ^ Barnes, KN (ed)(2000). The Eskom Red data book of birds of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland, Birdlife South Africa, Johannesburg. ISBN 0-620-25499-8
  • BirdLife International (2004). Polemaetus bellicosus. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 12 May 2006. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
  • Leslie Brown & Dean Amadon(1989).Eagles Hawks & Falcons of the World, The Wellfleet Press. ISBN 1-55521-472-X

[edit] External links

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