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There’s nothing quite like a hungry baby. For this mother eagle, mealtime means turning to the water for a tasty snake treat.
The video begins with the mother eagle scanning the environment for potential prey. A banded sea snake, venomous and lethal for people, swims nearby, unsuspecting that its day is about the go in a different direction.
The snake is venomous. Because of this, most predators avoid it. It spends most of its time slithering underwater where few other animals want to eat it.
But that doesn’t mean anything to the mother eagle and her hungry eaglets.
Talons outstretched, the eagle swoops down and plucks the sea snake from the water.
Banded sea snakes come to the waters near Malaysia, coming ashore to beaches like Snake Island to breed. They spend most of their time underwater where it is less likely to become someone’s next meal.
Why would the sea snake, who spends most of its life underwater, come up to the surface and make itself such easy prey?
Sea snakes don’t have gills and need to get air from the surface. Their lungs are nearly the same length as their body and need to fill up in order for them to go back under the surface. This is the perfect time for a white-bellied sea eagle to find lunch.
Eagles have sharp eyesight that makes sea snakes easy to spot. Their talons are perfect to pick up sea snakes from the water.
Wings spread open, she snatches the snake and begins to fly back to her nest. The snake coils around her feet, biting and writhing to get away. If the snake manages to bite the eagle, she could die due to its venom.
The mother eagle makes it back with the snake and feeds her babies. Unfortunate for the snake but delicious lunch for the eaglets.
I am broadly interested in how human activities influence the ability of wildlife to persist in the modified environments that we create.
Specifically, my research investigates how the configuration and composition of landscapes influence the movement and population dynamics of forest birds. Both natural and human-derived fragmenting of habitat can influence where birds settle, how they access the resources they need to survive and reproduce, and these factors in turn affect population demographics. Most recently, I have been studying the ability of individuals to move through and utilize forested areas which have been modified through timber harvest as they seek out resources for the breeding and postfledging phases. As well I am working in collaboration with Parks Canada scientists to examine in the influence of high density moose populations on forest bird communities in Gros Morne National Park. Many of my projects are conducted in collaboration or consultation with representatives of industry and government agencies, seeking to improve the management and sustainability of natural resource extraction.