IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Rare Harpy Eagle Chick Captured in New Photos

Harpy eagles nesting high above the understory of the Peruvian rainforest have been captured in a series of stunning new photos.
Get more newsLiveon

Harpy eagles nesting high above the understory of the Peruvian rainforest have been captured in a series of stunning new photos.

One of the eagles is a mama bird, while the other is an adorable eagle chick.

Because the giant bird of prey lives in the darkest portions of the rainforest and hunts its quarry in dead silence, many Peruvian Amazon birders can go their entire lives without seeing one, said nature photographer Jeff Cremer, who photographed the eagles.

"It's about as rare as seeing a unicorn," Cremer told Live Science.

Harpy eagles (Harpia harpyja) are imposing creatures. The massive birds can be up to 3 feet tall, with wingspans reaching 6 feet, Cremer said. Like stealth bombers, the birds of prey glide silently; they move through the shadows of the rainforest, hunting sloths, monkeys and even an occasional deer, Cremer said.

Rare Harpy Eagle
Conservationists at the Tambopata Research Center noticed the nest of a harpy eagle high in an ironwood tree.Jeff Cremer Photography/PeruNature.com

But the eagles are tough to spot, because they build their nests in the dark region between the forest's understory and canopy, high up in the trees, where the limbs just begin to branch out. In addition, logging and illegal mining have sharply reduced the harpy eagle's natural habitat and the majestic hunter is now considered near threatened by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. As a result, seeing a harpy eagle chick in the wild in this region is incredibly rare, Cremer said.

Guides at the Tambopata Research Center in Peru first became aware of the birds of prey after noticing a nest high up in the trees. The guides also saw a harpy eagle fly over their heads, carrying the head of a half-eaten sloth to the nest, which contained a single chick. After monitoring the nest, Cremer and his colleagues decided to climb up to take photos.

Getting those pictures was no easy feat. The nest was perched high in the branches of an ironwood tree, about 100 feet above the ground, so the team had to toss a slingshot-like rope up to the branches and then ascend using special climbing gear.

Harpy eagles create just two eggs each laying season, but only one hatches; the other is a backup in case the first fails to hatch, Cremer said. Harpy eagle chicks typically stay in the nest for about a year. As that year goes on, the mama bird will come back to the nest with food less and less frequently, and the chick will gradually have to spread its wings and fly to find its own prey, Cremer said.

This is a condensed version of an article that appeared on Live Science. Read the original here. Follow Tia Ghose on Twitter and Google+. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+.

MORE FROM LIVE SCIENCE