Dear Ajit and all,

I am among the many observers who recorded a Golden Eagle at Storm King this 
month with extreme negligence regarding critical detail. I was in the throes of 
an intense bout of twitching, riding the thrill of impending glory on the Hot 
100, and lazy with my record-keeping! But the bird was so cooperative and 
arresting, that I actually lapsed back into real birding mode and studied it 
quite carefully, despite my intentions to "take no chances with the LASP!" Pat 
and I discussed the eagle in reasonable detail, and I repeated most of the 
points in a phone call with Tom Burke, who had been there a day or two earlier. 
I've amended my eBird report with the following:

"Huge raptor, mostly blackish, but with extensive, messy paler markings across 
upperwing coverts; extensively bright golden nape; small and irregular pale 
blotch on breast; and black-tipped tail with paler base.* Feet deep yellow. The 
overall proportions were quite different from the superficially similar 
immature plumages of BAEA, most notably in the more normal-looking head and 
bill (not grotequely large as in Haliaeetus spp.) and overall more "normal" or 
"Buteo-like" manners during a fortuitous fly-around between periods perching at 
its traditional spot, first facing away and to the right, and afterwards 
perching facing us. Furthermore, it lacked white in the axillaries, underwing 
coverts, and belly, one or more of which would be present in any BAEA lacking 
white head and tail.

*The age of this bird, and its individual identity relative to other reports of 
GOEA from this area this season, are somewhat uncertain. The extensively pale 
upperwing coverts exclude a juvenile, and the messiness of these tracts 
suggests an adult to me (opportunity for multiple feather generations to be 
present). Furthermore, we did not see any white at the wrists, as is usually 
obvious in a juv GOEA. On the perched bird, I could see that the base of the 
tail was paler than the terminus several times, most strikingly when it raised 
its tail to defecate before its fly-around. At that point, it looked pretty 
much whitish at the base with a black terminal band. On the other hand, when it 
was flying around, the base of the tail looked only vaguely paler than the 
black terminus. Lacking critical experience with this species, I can't choose 
confidently between an older immature vs. an adult. If it is possible for the 
grayer base of an adult GOEA's tail to appear variably--and sometimes 
obviously--pale, depending on lighting and angle, I would lean toward an adult, 
based on other features and a consistent pattern of behavior over the years 
suggestive of a returning individual."

Shai Mitra
Bay Shore
________________________________________
From: bounce-126262833-3714...@list.cornell.edu 
[bounce-126262833-3714...@list.cornell.edu] on behalf of Ajit I. Antony 
[aiant...@earthlink.net]
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2022 6:35 PM
To: NYSbirds-L@cornell.edu
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Are there more than one Golden Eagle overwintering at 
Storm King Mountain, Orange County?

Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows
I know that many birders from out of Orange County, NY come to see the Storm  
King Mountain Golden Eagle, so hence this essay on this forum.

Thanks to all the birders entering their data in eBird we have good 
documentation of the Golden Eagle on Storm King for yet another year. A very 
few birders have the skills and equipment to photograph the species well, and 
many thanks to them.

I had seen a recent report on the Orange County RBA of a Golden Eagle sighting 
by Mearns Club member Barbara Thomascall at Iona Island 
https://ebird.org/atlasny/checklist/S100714805 whose description “Large eagle 
with golden nape, two brown bands along back of wings, some pale on the flight 
feathers of the underside of the wing” seemed to me to suggest a subadult GE. 
All the photographs I’ve seen this year of the Storm King GE suggested a 
“more-than-one-year-old” GE, so I wondered whether there were more than one GE 
overwintering in the area.

I looked at all the local eBird sightings for GE under Species Maps 
https://tinyurl.com/2p8wcmh3  I added in “Current Year” for Date Range and 
“Orange County” for Location.


A singular focus on only 1 feature of GE by all reporters

The feature described by almost everyone seems to be the golden nape to the 
exclusion of any other features of the species. At the I-84 Overlook Hawk Watch 
we have seen a number of subadult BE which “certainly seemed” initially to have 
convincing golden hackles/nape and a dihedral (BE at this location often have 
dihedrals because of the ridges) when they were really far away suggesting GE, 
but when they flew closer we realized they were Bald Eagle when we saw the 
diagnostic white axillaries or the oblique white line along the underwing.
Remember, a ‘juvenile’ eagle is one in its 1st year of life. An ‘immature’ is 
all years other than adult (and includes juvenile). A ‘Subadult’ is all years 
other than juvenile and adult.

Unfortunately other diagnostic features have been ignored by observers in their 
eBird reports such as the carpal bar (which is seen in flight on the top of the 
wings as a tawny oblique bar which is seen in all ages of GE except juveniles 
i.e. first-year birds). This is seen well in the eBird photographs of the 
perched Storm King GE – this is the broad tawny swath along the wing 
coverts/sides of the wing. This suggests an adult/subadult GE, definitely not a 
juvenile. It is well depicted in Sibley.

Another feature that is diagnostic in flight which is not been mentioned at all 
in any reports in 2022 is the white at the base of the inner primaries both 
above and below the wings (which can rarely be absent), and white at the base 
of the tail on juvenile GE (always there). Interestingly both these white 
features can also be seen on 1st year/Subadult I GE. The white areas are 
prominent enough at the distance the GE is usually seen to be visible in 
binoculars and definitely with a scope. Older Subadult GE do not have white at 
the bases of the primaries but limited white at the bases of the outer 
secondaries and progressive loss of white at the base of the tail after 
subadult I (which does) with each year .
At the I-84 Overlook Hawk Watch we had 27 Golden Eagle during the 2021 fall 
migration season including 8 GE in one day. Many of those eagles were as far as 
and further than the distance the Storm King Golden Eagle is usually seen at, 
so it  is possible to see many or all of these features.

Granted the bird has not been seen in flight too often but a golden (pardon the 
pun) opportunity has been wasted in not describing the bird well. The few 
observations of the GE in flight seem to assume the observer is seeing a GE 
without any doubt  as it has been seen in the area, without mentioning any of 
the specific GE features other than the nape. None of the observers seeing the 
species in flight have described the absence of any features that are commonly 
seen with a first-year Bald Eagle to prove that what they saw was a Golden 
Eagle. They seem to have mostly assumed that they were going to see a GE at 
that location and identified it as such because of others’ previous eBird 
reports. There are many Bald Eagle wintering along this part of the Hudson 
River and are more often seen in flight, and overall in the area BE outnumbers 
GE! No reports of the GE flying have mentioned:

  *   GE looking more like a buteo than a BE, with bulging “muscular” 
secondaries – GE
  *   smaller head compared to the length of the tail (larger head in BE more 
than half the length of the tail, cf. GE which has a smaller head and longer 
tail)
  *   Absence of white in the axillaries (on underwing) seen in BE
  *   Absence of white diagonal along the underwing (along median coverts) seen 
in BE
  *   if soaring, a dihedral on a GE,  usually flat-winged on a BE
  *   if it flaps, a GE ends its flap on an upstroke, while a BE ends its flap 
on a down-stroke and then flattens its wings out
  *   No white on the breast or belly on perched and flying GE, which may be 
seen on a 2-3 year BE
Evidence for more than 1 GE
This checklist https://ebird.org/checklist/S100857664 has a good photograph 
showing white at the base of its tail and with black at the tip without any 
tawny carpal bar – suggesting that this is a juvenile GE.
All other photographs on eBird checklists show a prominent carpal bar 
suggesting an an age other-than-juvenile = adult or subadult.
This would suggest that there is more than one GE overwintering in the Storm 
King area - at least 1 juvenile and 1 adult/subadult in 2022.

For purposes of better documentation and identification eBird does want us to 
identify any species with the greatest specificity, which includes age. 
https://support.ebird.org/en/support/solutions/articles/48000803130-how-to-document-your-sightings
 under Reporting Unusual Birds, suggested points are:

  *   Note diagnostic features
  *   Explain how similar species were eliminated
  *   Note age and sex
So all observers of the GE, please try and look for and add more written detail 
to your eBird reports and try to photograph the GE in flight.

Ajit  I. Antony, MD
E.   A.Mearns Bird Club
I-84 Overlook Hawk Watch
Hook Mountain Hawk Watch





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