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Eagle Count 
Two Bald Eagles near the Quinebaug River in Putnam. Photo by Jim Dexter.
 
 
 
Bald eagles
love Last 
Green 
Valley
For the sixth year in a row, 35 hearty volunteers braved the bitter cold to count bald eagles during the Midwinter Eagle Survey on Jan. 10.  The Last Green Valley, Inc. (TLGV) organized teams at 20 different locations on the Quinebaug, Shetucket, Willimantic, and Natchaug Rivers, as well as 11 lakes and ponds where eagles have been known to congregate.  
A record number of bald eagle sightings – 32 – rewarded TLGV volunteers during the early morning count.  Of these sightings, 19 were adults and 13 were brown-hued immature eagles. It can take up to 5 years for immature eagles to develop their distinctive white head and tail.  
It’s now up to staff from the CT Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to determine the number of individual birds in the area, based upon the detailed data reported by volunteers, such as exact time, location, and movement patterns.  TLGV estimates that at least 10 and perhaps as many as 15 individual eagles were present that morning.
Bald eagles are primarily fish eaters, although they have been reported to eat ducks and other prey they can capture.  They winter in The Last Green Valley because our rivers are not typically frozen over and provide excellent food sources.  Many of the eagles sighted in January arrived in The Last Green Valley over the past two months from northern states.  
Some of the eagles that were sighted are “native.” The Last Green Valley is home to an ever-increasing population of year-round resident bald eagles.  There are at least four known and successful bald eagle nests within The Last Green Valley’s 35 towns.  More than 12 eagle chicks have successfully fledged from Last Green Valley nests over the past five years.
The Midwinter Eagle Survey is organized by CT Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.  Nationally, the program is a project of the U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division.  Teams across the country observe on the same date and during the same hours to make the Midwinter Eagle Survey a national, state and regional snapshot of the health of the eagle population. Some states, such as Massachusetts, do not participate in the Midwinter Eagle Survey but conduct their own nest surveys in the spring.  
 
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