March 8, 2009
Eagle, jaguar successfully tracked
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CAMERON, W.Va. -- Large predators are difficult to study because they're relatively uncommon, and they roam widely. So I was thrilled when I heard two good-news stories about big predators.

Back in November 2006, Todd Katzner, director of conservation and field research at the National Aviary in Pittsburgh, and biologists from the Pennsylvania Game Commission and Powdermill Avian Research Center captured two golden eagles in western Pennsylvania and outfitted them with solar-powered satellite telemetry devices.

For years, birders have been seeing golden eagles pass through Pennsylvania in spring and fall, but no one knew where they were going or where they originated. This effort was an attempt to understand the movements of eastern golden eagles.

One of these eagles, No. 39, spent that first winter in Southern West Virginia, near Beckley, then moved to northern Quebec in the spring, presumably to nest. Unfortunately, its transmitter went quiet in June 2007.

Then, about five weeks ago, a biologist with the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, Jeff Hajenga, set up some motion-activated trail cameras on mountaintop clearings. The day after setting up the cameras, he had an image of a golden eagle feeding on road-kill deer, which had been used as bait.

Hajenga alerted Tricia Miller at Powdermill and soon her husband, Mike Lanzone, an ornithologist at Powdermill, traveled to Southern West Virginia and set up a cannon-propelled net. Before long, Lanzone captured a golden eagle, and it was No. 39.

Lanzone examined the bird, determined it was healthy, attached a new transmitter, and released it. Soon it will join other golden eagles as they head north through Pennsylvania on their way to breeding grounds in remote areas of northeastern Canada.

According to Dr. Katzner, "We now have about 10 golden eagles fitted with transmitters in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, and another five or six in Canada. We haven't yet confirmed the birds are nesting in Quebec, but based on their limited movements during the nesting season, we suspect they are."

The other big predator story comes from southwest of Tucson, Ariz. On Feb. 18, biologists inadvertently trapped a healthy, 118-pound male jaguar during a study of mountain lions and black bears.

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