Help sought with dead bald eagle and live ones, too

Posted on: July 30, 2019 | Bob Frye | Comments

The bald eagle is no longer endangered in PA.

Game Commission officials are seeking information on who illegally killed this bald eagle.

There’s one less to count this year.

But, if all goes well, the person responsible for that will pay. Literally.

Pennsylvania Game Commission officials are asking for the public’s help in figuring out who killed a mature bald eagle in Erie County recently.

Someone discovered the eagle on July 25, near Hope Cemetery in Elk Creek Township. That’s at the intersection of Route 18 and Sherman Road, near Cranesville.

The local game warden investigated. He determined someone shot the bird.

Who is, as of yet, a mystery. But maybe not for long.

Now, the commission hopes someone knows the identity of the poacher who pulled the trigger and will turn them in.

And there are two ways to do that.

First, those with information can call the commission’s northwest region office at 814-432-3187. Second, they can report it via the agency’s Operation Game Thief Hotline at 1-888-PGC-8001 or the program’s online reporting form.

The commission handles all calls anonymously.

Anyone reporting a violation like this one through the Game Thief program stands to benefit, however, if they are willing to leave their name.

The commission levies an additional $500 fine on those convicted of killing big game animals or protected, threatened or endangered species.

“The $500 enhanced penalty goes into a special fund from which half the amount ($250) may be paid to the individual who provided the information that led to the conviction. The remainder will be used to offset the costs of Operation Game Thief,” says the commission.

Officials characterized bald eagles as endangered in Pennsylvania for decades. As recently as the 1970s there were just three nesting pairs left in the state.

That changed.

Now commission officials say there are upwards of 300 eagle nests in Pennsylvania. Game Commissioners re-classified the species as protected – but no longer threatened or endangered – several years ago.

The birds are doing so well, in fact, that commission staff can no longer keep tabs on all the eagle nests statewide themselves.

Instead, they’re asking for the public’s help there, too. Anyone who finds a nest is asked to report it, online, with notes on when they saw it, what the birds in it were doing, whether there are any young and more.

Meanwhile, the commission is asking hunters to voluntarily switch to using non-lead ammunition or at least burying or hiding big game carcasses. That’s so that eagles don’t ingest dangerous amounts of the metal that is often poisonous to them.

 

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Bob Frye is the everybodyadventures.com editor. Reach him at 412-838-5148 or bfrye@535mediallc.com. See other stories, blogs, videos and more at everybodyadventures.com.

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