Endangered Philippine eagle killed by falling branch

Agence France-Presse

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Days of non-stop rain caused the huge branch of a tree to fall on Arakan's cage at the Philippine Eagle Foundation's center

RARE BIRD. In this file photo, Arakan lands in his makeshift nest in a cage at the Philippine Eagle Center in Davao City. File photo by Romeo Gacad/AFP

MANILA, Philippines – A rare Philippine eagle, whose species is on the brink of extinction, was killed inside a conservation group’s breeding center when a branch fell on its cage, the center said Saturday, January 25.

The 15-year-old male bird, named “Arakan,” was one of about 250 adult Philippine eagles remaining according to the Swiss-based International Union for the Conservation of Nature, which lists the species as “critically endangered.”

Days of non-stop rain caused the huge branch of a tree to fall on Arakan’s cage at the Philippine Eagle Foundation’s center in the southern island of Mindanao, crushing the raptor on January 18, the foundation said.

Numerous large trees are planted inside the centre because the conservation group is “trying to simulate the natural environment of the eagles,” said the foundation’s communications officer Beauxy Auxtero.

The eagle, also known as the “Monkey-eating Eagle,” is one of the largest birds of prey in the world and is the most critically endangered of all the world’s raptors, the IUCN says on its website.

Famed for its elongated nape feathers that form into a shaggy crest, the Philippine eagle is found only on four of the Philippines’ largest islands but mostly on Mindanao and grows to a meter (3.3 feet) with a two-meter wingspan.

The Philippine Eagle Foundation rescues stricken birds in the wild including Arakan who was turned over to the foundation in 1999. It also has a captive breeding programme.

The eagle, which is the country’s national bird, is protected by law but authorities say the biggest threat is the loss of its habitat as humans encroach on the country’s dwindling forest ranges.

Efforts to release rehabilitated birds into the wild have had mixed success.

In October last year, a juvenile male eagle was found apparently shot to death just two months after it was freed by the foundation. – Rappler.com

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