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End of an era: After 30 years, the A-Team logs its last bald eagle


Eagle-eyed:
 They dubbed themselves the A-Team. The team is (from left) Capt. Fuzzzo Schermer, Bryan Watts and Mitchell Byrd. The trio disbanded this spring after conducting 30 years of bald eagle census flights across the Chesapeake Bay drainage.
 Photo by Bart Paxton
Photo - of -
by Joseph McClain

May 4, 2021
It’s a new era for bald eagles in the Chesapeake Bay drainage and the end of an era for a veteran team of eagle researchers.
The A-Team has signed off after 30 years of flying at treetop level along the Bay and its tributaries, counting nesting eagles and their chicks. The three-man team based at William & Mary’s Center for Conservation Biology completed its last flight on April 17, counting chicks in nests up the Chickahominy River. They’ve documented an astounding comeback in the regional population of the nat ....

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The eagle has landed: After decades flying thousands of miles to find nests, pair of Virginia eagle spotters make final flight


W&M eagle experts and a pilot are retiring from bald eagle surveys after 60-year research.
When biologist Mitchell Byrd began counting bald eagles in Virginia, there wasn’t much to count. It was 1977, and there were only 33 nests in the state. Along the James River, there were none.
Pollution was killing the big birds.
What followed was one of the most remarkable comebacks in conservation history. So many eagles inhabit Virginia now that they are raising families in people’s yards and waging bloody wars over prime nest sites.
“The growth of the eagle population was very slow at first, but once it got established, it was very rapid,” said Byrd, now 92. ....

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