Help them by avoiding eagle closure areas
PHOENIX - While you are lying in your bed at night, 18 people are
sleeping in tents so they can wake up at the crack of dawn to help protect
our state's bald eagles.
"It's part of a program that has saved the lives of 44 eagle nestlings since
it began in 1978," says James Driscoll, head of the Arizona Game and Fish
Department Bald Eagle Management Program. "That's equal to 10 percent of all
the eagles that have lived to fly on their own in Arizona since the program
started."
The Arizona Bald Eagle Nestwatch Program began as a weekend volunteer effort
by the U.S. Forest Service and Maricopa Audubon Society. Now 19 agencies are
involved with the program to monitor bald eagle breeding areas under heavy
pressure from human recreational activities. The nest watchers protect the
eagles while they're nesting and raising young, and they also help educate
the public, so people don't disrupt the breeding process. Sometimes people
pass by signs marking the boundaries of an eagle closure area.
"We let them know what we're up to and why we're out here," says nest
watcher Steven Alsup. "Most people are really interested and didn't realize
where they were. Usually, we tell them it's best if they go back out the way
they came in, and we haven't had anyone give us too much of a problem about
it."
This year's nest watchers began their four-month tour of duty on Feb. 4.
They will watch nine breeding areas, most along the Salt and Verde rivers in
national forests, on Native American lands, and in Maricopa County parks.
The contractors will spend dawn to dusk collecting data about the eagles'
behavior and notifying rescuers of any life-threatening situations for the
birds.
Arizona has 42 breeding pairs of bald eagles. Last year a record 47
nestlings hatched in our state. Biologists hope for a similar number this
year, although large amounts of rain have washed sediment into our river
systems, which could make it tougher for the eagles to find food. Nest
watchers will play a vital role in monitoring the situation.