Difference between revisions of "Golden Eagle"

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|introduction='''Golden Eagle''' is a type of [[Friend]] that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.
 
|introduction='''Golden Eagle''' is a type of [[Friend]] that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.
 
|appearance=Golden Eagle has medium-length brown hair, with her central bang colored yellow to represent a beak. She has pale skin and amber eyes. She wears a black Hussar-style uniform with gold braids and trim and light gray buttons and belt.  She wears short blue shorts over light brown leggings that get lighter near the bottom, and has yellow shoes. The wings on top of her head are brown, with white near the middle of the feathers and dark brown at the tips. Her tail feathers are white with brown tips.
 
|appearance=Golden Eagle has medium-length brown hair, with her central bang colored yellow to represent a beak. She has pale skin and amber eyes. She wears a black Hussar-style uniform with gold braids and trim and light gray buttons and belt.  She wears short blue shorts over light brown leggings that get lighter near the bottom, and has yellow shoes. The wings on top of her head are brown, with white near the middle of the feathers and dark brown at the tips. Her tail feathers are white with brown tips.
|reallife=The Golden Eagle is a very large bird, with wingspans ranging from six to eight feet from wingtip to wingtip. Females typically weigh about 14 pounds while males weigh in at about 9 pounds on average. Fully-grown golden eagles are primarily golden brown in color, while chicks and juveniles have darker plumage with bands of nearly white on their wings and tail. Golden Eagles typically hunt for food during daylight hours and require about 0.5 pounds of food per day, although they can go multiple days in a row without food before eating 2 or 3 pounds in one meal. They have been recorded as eating over 400 different species of vertebrate prey, with their most common prey being rabbits, hares, ground squirrels, and smaller birds. Rarely Golden Eagles have been seen to prey on larger animals like sheep, deer, wolves, foxes, and wildcats.
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|reallife=[[File:Беркут (Aquila chrysaetos).jpg|thumb|upright=0.80|left|A Golden Eagle feeding on a carcass in Finland.]]
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The Golden Eagle is a very large bird, with wingspans ranging from six to eight feet from wingtip to wingtip. Females typically weigh about 14 pounds while males weigh in at about 9 pounds on average. Fully-grown golden eagles are primarily golden brown in color, while chicks and juveniles have darker plumage with bands of nearly white on their wings and tail.
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Golden Eagles typically hunt for food during daylight hours and require about 0.5 pounds of food per day, although they can go multiple days in a row without food before eating 2 or 3 pounds in one meal. They have been recorded as eating over 400 different species of vertebrate prey, with their most common prey being rabbits, hares, ground squirrels, and smaller birds. Rarely Golden Eagles have been seen to prey on larger animals like sheep, deer, wolves, foxes, and wildcats.
  
 
Golden Eagles are typically monogamous, mating for several years to life in most cases. Typically mating season is in the spring and females lay four eggs on average, which incubate for six weeks. Typically only about half of eggs laid survive to begin fledging at about three months old. By the fall of the year they were hatched young eagles will leave the nest and wander for four or five years before settling in a territory of their own. Golden Eagles have a large territory of up to 75 or 80 square miles, with nests typically being built in high places, particularly on cliffs.
 
Golden Eagles are typically monogamous, mating for several years to life in most cases. Typically mating season is in the spring and females lay four eggs on average, which incubate for six weeks. Typically only about half of eggs laid survive to begin fledging at about three months old. By the fall of the year they were hatched young eagles will leave the nest and wander for four or five years before settling in a territory of their own. Golden Eagles have a large territory of up to 75 or 80 square miles, with nests typically being built in high places, particularly on cliffs.

Revision as of 02:28, 24 January 2020

Golden Eagle

Golden EagleOriginal.png

Noface.jpg

Character Data
Japanese Name: イヌワシ
Romanised Name: Inuwashi
First Featured in: Kemono Friends (2015 Game)
Animal Data
Scientific Name: Aquila chrysaetos
Distribution: North America, Asia, Europe, North Africa
Diet: Carnivore
Average Lifespan in the Wild: 30 years
Read More: Golden eagle
Conservation Status: Status iucn3.1 LC.svg.png
Golden Eagle Pavilion Kingdom Nexon Game Gallery

Golden Eagle is a type of Friend that appeared in the original Kemono Friends mobile game.

Appearance

Golden Eagle has medium-length brown hair, with her central bang colored yellow to represent a beak. She has pale skin and amber eyes. She wears a black Hussar-style uniform with gold braids and trim and light gray buttons and belt. She wears short blue shorts over light brown leggings that get lighter near the bottom, and has yellow shoes. The wings on top of her head are brown, with white near the middle of the feathers and dark brown at the tips. Her tail feathers are white with brown tips.

Series Appearances

Appearances In Kemono Friends Media
Media Role

In Real Life

A Golden Eagle feeding on a carcass in Finland.

The Golden Eagle is a very large bird, with wingspans ranging from six to eight feet from wingtip to wingtip. Females typically weigh about 14 pounds while males weigh in at about 9 pounds on average. Fully-grown golden eagles are primarily golden brown in color, while chicks and juveniles have darker plumage with bands of nearly white on their wings and tail.

Golden Eagles typically hunt for food during daylight hours and require about 0.5 pounds of food per day, although they can go multiple days in a row without food before eating 2 or 3 pounds in one meal. They have been recorded as eating over 400 different species of vertebrate prey, with their most common prey being rabbits, hares, ground squirrels, and smaller birds. Rarely Golden Eagles have been seen to prey on larger animals like sheep, deer, wolves, foxes, and wildcats.

Golden Eagles are typically monogamous, mating for several years to life in most cases. Typically mating season is in the spring and females lay four eggs on average, which incubate for six weeks. Typically only about half of eggs laid survive to begin fledging at about three months old. By the fall of the year they were hatched young eagles will leave the nest and wander for four or five years before settling in a territory of their own. Golden Eagles have a large territory of up to 75 or 80 square miles, with nests typically being built in high places, particularly on cliffs.

Trivia

  • Golden Eagles are one of the most commonly used birds in falconry, with recorded cases of Eurasian Golden Eagles killing prey as large as Gray Wolves.
  • Golden Eagles are the most widely distributed species of eagle in the world.

Bird Friends
Auks
Atlantic PuffinGreat AukTufted Puffin
Birds-of-Paradise
Greater Bird-Of-ParadiseGreater LophorinaWestern Parotia
Birds of Prey Guadalupe CaracaraKing VultureLappet-Faced VultureNorthern GoshawkPeregrine FalconSecretarybirdStriated Caracara
Eagles Bald EagleGolden EagleHarpy EagleMartial Eagle
Owls Barn OwlEurasian Eagle-OwlForest OwletKyushu OwlNorthern White-Faced OwlSpectacled Owl
Columbids
DodoPassenger PigeonRock Dove
Gruiformes
Grey Crowned CraneOkinawa RailRed-Crowned CraneWhite-Naped Crane
Gulls
Black-Tailed GullCommon GullRoss's Gull
Pelecaniformes Great White PelicanPink-Backed PelicanShoebill
Ibises Black-Headed IbisCrested IbisScarlet Ibis
Penguins
Adélie PenguinAfrican PenguinChinstrap PenguinEmperor PenguinGentoo PenguinHumboldt PenguinKing PenguinNew Zealand Giant PenguinRoyal PenguinSouthern Rockhopper Penguin
Phasianids
ChickenChukar PartridgeGreen PheasantIndian PeafowlRed JunglefowlWhite Peafowl
Piciformes
Acorn WoodpeckerCampo FlickerGreater Honeyguide
Ratites
Common OstrichEmuGreater RheaNorth Island Giant MoaSouthern Brown KiwiSouthern Cassowary
Waterfowl
Black SwanEastern Spot-Billed DuckEgyptian GooseTundra Swan
Miscellaneous Birds
Arctic TernAustralian BrushturkeyBlue-and-Yellow MacawCommon CuckooGastornisGoldcrestGreat CormorantGreat HornbillGreater FlamingoGreater RoadrunnerHelmeted GuineafowlJapanese Bush WarblerJapanese CormorantLarge-Billed CrowLong-Tailed TitMarvelous SpatuletailMasked BoobyMedium Tree FinchOriental StorkResplendent QuetzalRhinoceros HornbillRock PtarmiganScarlet MacawSuperb LyrebirdSuzakuWhite StorkYatagarasu