yes they do
No, they attack members of the crowd
Raccoons eat eagles, and they sometimes attack each other.
Harpy eagles are large birds with large, hooked beaks. Their necks, backs, heads and wings are dark gray, while their fronts and undersides are white. The have a series of stripes around each of the legs.
Some examples of animals that eat each other in the tropical rainforest include jaguars preying on capybaras, boa constrictors feeding on monkeys, harpy eagles hunting sloths, and caimans devouring fish and amphibians.
no, they stay away from each other usually.
they don't because humans kill eagles.
Eagles are carnivores, parrots are herbivores
Golden eagles have few enemies except man. The young or injured birds may be taken by predators, but healthy adults are hard to catch, and could really put up a scrap if caught with their beak and talons.
The major threat is loss of habitat from clear cutting, destruction of nesting sites and shooting. Harpy eagles need large tracts of forest to hunt in. Most forests have only one nest every 10 or 15 miles. Each nesting pair has a single chick every two to three years. With such a low density of harpy eagles and their low rate of reproduction, even the smallest pressure on their hunting abilities eliminates them from an area.
No.They do not feed on each other.
They attack like each other like they would anything, but to kill each other they tear them apart and burn the pieces
no they do not