San Diego Zoo Frightening HARPY EAGLE can catch & eat monkeys! The Best Animals & Wildlife HD
Tag : harpy, eagle, bird, prey, eyes, beak, incredible, unbelievable, awesome, san, diego, zoo, best, animals, wildlife, hd, high, definition, largest, most, powerful, raptor, carnivore, carnivorous, eats, monke
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- Category : Animals
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- Description : The powerful Harpy Eagle can easily...(more) grab a monkey weighing 5 kg and fly away with it. The Harpy Eagle can exert a pressure of 42 kgf/cm² (4.1 MPa or 530lbf/in2) with its talons. It can also lift more than three-quarters of its body weight.
It is the largest and most powerful raptor found in the Americas, usually inhabiting tropical lowland rainforests in the upper (emergent) canopy layer.
James Graff N.B.:
"If the child - who is calling this raptor a "birdie" - were a newborn, this bird could easily carry him away...if they were to fight - at his age or as an adult....Well, I would be very, very afraid that this incredible "birdie" - the largest and most powerful carnivorous raptor found in the Americas - would easily kill or seriously injury me quite easily! It literally eats monkeys for lunch...530 foot pounds of pressure per square inch (is it per claw/talon??)...ouch!!"
The Harpy Eagle (Harpia harpyja), sometimes known as the American Harpy Eagle, is a Neotropical species of eagle. This species was first described by Linnaeus in his Systema naturae in 1758 as Vultur harpyja.[2] It is the only member of the genus Harpia.
Its name references the harpies from Ancient Greek mythology. These were wind spirits that took the dead to Hades, and were said to have a body like an eagle and the face of a human.
Description
The upperside of the Harpy Eagle is covered with slate black feathers, and the underside is with white. There is a black band across the chest up to the neck. The head is pale grey, and is crowned with a double crest. The plumage of male and female is identical. The talons are up to 13 cm (5 in) long.
Female Harpy Eagles average 100-110 cm (3.3 ft) in length with a 200 cm (6 ft, 7 in) wingspan and typically weigh 6.5 kg to 9 kg (14 to 20 lbs). One exceptional captive female, "Jezebel", weighed 12.3 kg (26 lb), possibly because of relative lack of exercise and readily available food at a zoo. Only the Philippine Eagle and the Steller's Sea Eagle approach similar dimensions, although the wingspan of the Harpy Eagle is relatively small (an adaptation that increases manoeuvrability in forested habitats) and is matched or surpassed by other species. The male, in comparison, weighs only about 3.8 kg to 5.4 kg (8.5 lb to 12 lb).
Ecology
This species is an actively hunting carnivore. Its main prey are tree-dwelling mammals such as monkeys, coatis, and sloths; it may also attack other bird species such as macaws. The talons are extremely powerful and assist with suppressing prey. The Harpy Eagle can exert a pressure of 42 kgf/cm² (4.1 MPa or 530lbf/in2) with its talons. It can also lift more than three-quarters of its body weight.
A pair of Harpy Eagles lays two white eggs in a large stick nest high in a tree, and raise one chick every 23 years. After the first chick hatches, the second egg is ignored and fails to hatch. The chick fledges in 6 months, but the parents continue to feed it for another 6 to 10 months. It can be aggressive toward humans who disturb its nesting sites or appear to be a threat to its young.
Status and conservation
The Harpy Eagle is threatened by logging and hunting throughout its range, in large parts of which the bird has become a transient sight only: in Brazil, it was all but totally wiped out from the Atlantic rainforest and is only found in numbers in the most remote parts of the Amazon Basin; a Brazilian journalistic account of the mid-1990s already complained that at the time it was only found in numbers, in Brazilian territory, on the northern side of the Equator[4] The Harpy Eagle is considered Near Threatened by IUCN and threatened with extinction by CITES (appendix I). The Peregrine Fund consider it a "conservation-dependent species", meaning it depends on a dedicated effort for captive breeding and release to the wild as well as habitat protection in order to prevent it from reaching endangered status. A research project is currently afoot at the National Institute of Amazonian Research, through which 45 known nesting locations are being monitored by voluntaries. A Harpy Eagle chick has been fitted with a radio transmitter that will allow it to be tracked via a satellite signal.
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