Suzy, Dave and Ken-
My experience is that Golden Eagles can and will take out even a healthy 
Sandhill Crane in flight.  I've personally witnessed a Golden Eagle taking a 
Lesser Sandhill in flight and a Golden Eagle taking an American White Pelican 
in flight.  Im not sure if Golden Eagles will take out a Greater Sandhill in 
flight.  My experience is that for the most part the Greaters at Bosque del 
Apache in NM mostly ignore Bald Eagles - hence my best guess is that the 
Greaters are not exposed to much of a threart from Goldens on thier relatively 
short migratory routes.

The Lesser Sandhills migrating through Nebraska, on the other hand, are 
petrified of Bald Eagles.  I have never witnessed a Bald Ealge go after a 
healthy Sandhill, but they do go after the weak and injured ones.  Many of 
these Lessers migrate fairly far and experience areas with large Golden Eagle 
populations.  Hence - my thinking is that to the Lessers an Eagle is an Eagle 
and they might not be able to distinguish a Bald/Golden Eagle.  Some of my 
worst nights in a Nebraska blind were when bald eagles perched on top of our 
blind and not a single sandhill landed in sight!


Allison Hilf
Denver, CO
currently in FL


-----Original Message-----
From: STROM, Ken <[email protected]>
To: cobirds <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Oct 25, 2010 4:59 pm
Subject: RE: [cobirds] Sandhill crane Boulder county



Golden Eagles have been observed successfully preying on Sandhill Cranes (and 
even Whooping Cranes), though all the cases I’m personally familiar with 
involved a mid-air attack on a flying crane.  In one observation on the Platte 
River, the crane fell to the ground after having been hit from above, and then 
the Golden Eagle swooped down, picked up the crane and carried it to the top of 
a post to feed on it. 
 
As for Bald Eagles, although they commonly flush flocks of roosting cranes, I 
never heard a reliable report of a Bald Eagle successfully taking a live crane, 
in a dozen years of working on the Platte in Nebraska.  One personal 
observation I had was pretty instructive.  A Sandhill Crane with a broken wing 
found itself alone on a sandbar in the Platte after its thousands of companions 
departed the roost one morning.  In short order, half a dozen Bald Eagles 
(adults and immatures) gathered on sandbars and logs near the injured crane.  
One by one they repeatedly made flying passes at the crane but were driven off 
as it defended itself with only its formidable beak.  After about 30 minutes, 
the eagles gave up and moved off.
 
So my overall impression is that Golden Eagles can successfully prey on a 
flying crane (at least when the conditions are right) but that even an injured 
crane is a bit too much for Bald Eagles – though they may give it a try now and 
then, and maybe even rarely succeed.
 
Ken  
 

Ken Strom
Audubon Colorado
Boulder


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
David Alcock
Sent: Monday, October 25, 2010 1:46 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: cobirds
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Sandhill crane Boulder county

 

Hi,

After seeing the report that the Sandhill was still present early this morning 
I decided to head over myself to see if I could relocate it.   True to the 
directions the juv. Sandhill Crane was feeding in the wheat field.   I was 
afraid it was going to leave just as I spotted it, because just as I pulled to 
a stop a N. Harrier headed low across the field directly towards the Crane.   
To my relief the two birds largley ignored one another.   A few minutes and 
some poor photos later another bird spooked the Crane.   I kept the crane in 
frame as it flew, and then tried to ID the culprit who chased it off.   From my 
impression and close looks at really bad pics it appears to have been a 3rd 
year Bald Eagle.   I watched the two fly east and drop down behind the first 
group of trees to the east.   After a few minutes I did see two large birds 
rise from that area, the presumable Sandhill heading SSE, possibly turning back 
towards the S as I lost it.  

 

Does anyone have experience with the frequency of Bald Eagles taking Sandhill 
Cranes in migration?   Would other area species attempt to snack on prey that 
size?    

Has anyone else seen similar interactions with this bird?  

 

Thanks and good birding! 
Dave

On Sat, Oct 23, 2010 at 8:36 PM, Suzi PLOOSTER <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi,

The Sandhill Crane that Ruth Carol Cushman reported yesterday is still in the 
area.  We observed it in the wheat stubble field west of the road into the 
South Teller Trailhead off east Arapahoe  at approx 5:30 pm today.

Suzi  and Myron Plooster
Lafayette CO


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David Alcock
Broomfield, CO
http://daveabirding.blogspot.com/
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