Harpy Eagle: Difference between revisions
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Despite their wingspan, which can reach up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) across, harpies fly through their forest home with great agility. For nesting, harpies favor silk-cotton trees (kapok trees) and usually build nests 90 to 140 feet (27 to 43 meters) above the ground. They like to use trees with widely spaced branches for a clear flight path to and from the nest. Harpies use large sticks to create the nest's huge frame and line it with softer greens, seedpods, and animal fur to make it warm and comfortable. A harpy nest measures about 4 feet (1.2 meters) thick and 5 feet (1.5 meters) across, large enough for a person to lie across! Once built, an eagle pair may reuse and remodel the same nest for many years. | Despite their wingspan, which can reach up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) across, harpies fly through their forest home with great agility. For nesting, harpies favor silk-cotton trees (kapok trees) and usually build nests 90 to 140 feet (27 to 43 meters) above the ground. They like to use trees with widely spaced branches for a clear flight path to and from the nest. Harpies use large sticks to create the nest's huge frame and line it with softer greens, seedpods, and animal fur to make it warm and comfortable. A harpy nest measures about 4 feet (1.2 meters) thick and 5 feet (1.5 meters) across, large enough for a person to lie across! Once built, an eagle pair may reuse and remodel the same nest for many years. | ||
As parents, they fiercely defend their eggs and young. The mother lays one or two eggs in a clutch, and she only reproduces every two to three years. Both parents incubate eggs, with the female taking most of the responsibility. The first eaglet to hatch gets all the attention and is more likely to survive, while the other egg dies from lack of incubation. So why does the female lay two eggs? The second egg acts as an insurance policy just in case there is something wrong with the first egg. If the first egg fails to hatch, the second egg has a decent chance of hatching, saving the parents the need to start over with a new egg! | As parents, they fiercely defend their eggs and young. The mother lays one or two eggs in a clutch, and she only reproduces every two to three years. Both parents incubate eggs, with the female taking most of the responsibility. The first eaglet to hatch gets all the attention and is more likely to survive, while the other egg dies from lack of incubation. So why does the female lay two eggs? The second egg acts as an insurance policy just in case there is something wrong with the first egg. If the first egg fails to hatch, the second egg has a decent chance of hatching, saving the parents the need to start over with a new egg! | ||
The newly hatched chick is all white and doesn’t attain its full adult coloring until its third year. Both parents feed the chick for about 10 months. Harpy eagle chicks are ready to fledge at about five to six months of age, but they usually hang around the nest for over a year, begging a meal from its parents. Maybe returning once in 10 days, the parents provide less and less food, forcing Junior to fend for him or herself | The newly hatched chick is all white and doesn’t attain its full adult coloring until its third year. Both parents feed the chick for about 10 months. Harpy eagle chicks are ready to fledge at about five to six months of age, but they usually hang around the nest for over a year, begging a meal from its parents. Maybe returning once in 10 days, the parents provide less and less food, forcing Junior to fend for him or herself. | ||
|trivia=* With a 7-foot wingspan and a foot grip stronger than a Rottweiler’s jaws, the jungle-inhabiting harpy eagle has no natural predators, except humans. Though title for the largest bird of prey belongs to the Andean condor, the harpy eagle is considered the most powerful. It is strong enough to carry prey close to 20 lbs or capable of seizing animals many times its size, like a small deer! | |trivia=* With a 7-foot wingspan and a foot grip stronger than a Rottweiler’s jaws, the jungle-inhabiting harpy eagle has no natural predators, except humans. Though title for the largest bird of prey belongs to the Andean condor, the harpy eagle is considered the most powerful. It is strong enough to carry prey close to 20 lbs or capable of seizing animals many times its size, like a small deer! | ||
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[[Category:Real Animal Friends]] [[Category:Bird Friends]] [[Category:Birds Of Prey Friends]] [[Category:Eagle Friends]] [[Category:Needs Appearance]] [[Category:Nexon Game Debuts]] | [[Category:Real Animal Friends]] [[Category:Bird Friends]] [[Category:Birds Of Prey Friends]] [[Category:Eagle Friends]] [[Category:Needs Appearance]] [[Category:Nexon Game Debuts]] |
Revision as of 00:06, 25 March 2020
Harpy Eagle
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オウギワシ | |||
Character Data | |||
Romaji | Ōgiwashi
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Debut | Kemono Friends (2015 Game) | ||
Animal Data | |||
Scientific Name | Harpia harpyja
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Distribution | the Americas
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Diet | Carnivore
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Avg. Lifespan | 25-35 years
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Read More | Harpy eagle
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Conservation | ![]() | ||
Harpy Eagle | Nexon Game |
Harpy Eagle is a type of Friend that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.
Series Appearances
Media | Role |
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In Real Life
The harpy eagle is legendary, although few people have seen one in the wild. Early South American explorers named these great birds after harpies, the predatory “frightful, flying creatures with hooked beak and claws” of Greek mythology. This dark gray bird of prey has a very distinctive look, with feathers atop its head that fan into a bold crest when the bird feels threatened. Some smaller gray feathers create a facial disk that may focus sound waves to improve the bird’s hearing, similar to owls.
Like most eagle species, the female “harpy” is almost twice as large as the male. The harpy eagle's legs can be as thick as a small child's wrist, and its curved, back talons are larger than grizzly bear claws at 5 inches (13 centimeters) long! The harpy may not be the largest bird of prey (that title belongs to the Andean condor), but this extraordinary creature is definitely the heaviest and most powerful of birds.
Despite their wingspan, which can reach up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) across, harpies fly through their forest home with great agility. For nesting, harpies favor silk-cotton trees (kapok trees) and usually build nests 90 to 140 feet (27 to 43 meters) above the ground. They like to use trees with widely spaced branches for a clear flight path to and from the nest. Harpies use large sticks to create the nest's huge frame and line it with softer greens, seedpods, and animal fur to make it warm and comfortable. A harpy nest measures about 4 feet (1.2 meters) thick and 5 feet (1.5 meters) across, large enough for a person to lie across! Once built, an eagle pair may reuse and remodel the same nest for many years.
As parents, they fiercely defend their eggs and young. The mother lays one or two eggs in a clutch, and she only reproduces every two to three years. Both parents incubate eggs, with the female taking most of the responsibility. The first eaglet to hatch gets all the attention and is more likely to survive, while the other egg dies from lack of incubation. So why does the female lay two eggs? The second egg acts as an insurance policy just in case there is something wrong with the first egg. If the first egg fails to hatch, the second egg has a decent chance of hatching, saving the parents the need to start over with a new egg!
The newly hatched chick is all white and doesn’t attain its full adult coloring until its third year. Both parents feed the chick for about 10 months. Harpy eagle chicks are ready to fledge at about five to six months of age, but they usually hang around the nest for over a year, begging a meal from its parents. Maybe returning once in 10 days, the parents provide less and less food, forcing Junior to fend for him or herself.
Trivia
- With a 7-foot wingspan and a foot grip stronger than a Rottweiler’s jaws, the jungle-inhabiting harpy eagle has no natural predators, except humans. Though title for the largest bird of prey belongs to the Andean condor, the harpy eagle is considered the most powerful. It is strong enough to carry prey close to 20 lbs or capable of seizing animals many times its size, like a small deer!