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Q: How long can a nesting bald eagle go without food?
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Related questions

What special needs does the bald eagle have?

A bald eagle's needs are food water there habitat.


What do they eat the bald eagle?

Food


What are two food chains of the bald eagle?

a bald man and a bird.


What would eat a bald eagle?

not many things would try for a bald eagle is at the top of its food chain.


What food can you make out of bald eagle meat?

its hard to tell , since not many people eat bald eagle!


What attacks a bald eagle?

anything can attack a bald eagle if it Hungary and cant find any other food


How does a bald eagle get its food?

they do something with its talons


How does the eagle fits its food chain?

how does the bald eagle fits its foo chain


What bird begins with b in food?

bald eagle


What the bald eagle eats?

Nothing eats the Bald Eagle or any kind of eagle, it's the highest in it's food chain.


Who is helping the bald eagle?

the people from the zoo are helping the bald eagle by giving them food and shelter


How did DDT affect bald eagles?

DDT affected the eggs and made the shells thin and weak. They broke when the mother eagle sat on them to hatch them.According the the US Fish & Wildlife website DDT was the major contributing factor to Bald Eagle population decline after WWII, by 1963 there were only 487 nesting pairs left - that was the minimum population. Since DDT use was banned in the US in 1972 the population has rebounded even though there is increased loss of habitat & prey for them to feed on (esp. salmon).The bald eagle population was just beginning to recover when a new threat emerged. The pesticide DDT, which was used to control insects that damaged crops, was getting into the food that the bald eagle ate. The pesticide made it more difficult for the bald eagle to absorb calcium and the lack of calcium made the shells of the bald eagle's eggs thinner. Many eggs broke before they could hatch and the bald eagle population dropped. DDT use was outlawed in the U.S. in 1972, and the bald eagle population has slowly recoveredAlternative answer:A myth. DDT didn't affect Bald Eagle eggs. Bald Eagle populations reached their minimum in the US prior to the introduction of DDT(1940). Bald Eagle populations were already increasing by 1960 at the height of DDT production and usage.The real cause of the Bald Eagle's decline was primarily hunting as they were considered a nuisance, a threat to livestock and the fisheries. Secondarily they suffered from a lack of food sources, habitat, poisoning from lead shot and other pollutants (lead, mercury, etc.).