Home & Garden

Bald Eagles Return To Montgomery County

The key to their resurgence in one local park is, apparently, incredibly reliant on the careful placement of roadkill deer.

LOWER MORELAND, PA -- Bald eagles have returned to Montgomery County.

At the Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust in Lower Moreland, bald eagles have laid eggs in a nest in an evergreen tree, according to a report in The Intelligencer.

The ecology of the landscape was reportedly perfectly suited to improving the eagle population.

Find out what's happening in Upper Moreland-Willow Grovefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The area is biologically diverse and filled with a fresh supply of deer carcasses, moved there by a park official, according to a report.

They’re the first bald eagles known to reproduce in the park since the 19th century.

Find out what's happening in Upper Moreland-Willow Grovefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“This area is McDonald’s for the eagles,” Eugene R. Potapov, a raptor expert who teaches at Bryn Athyn College, told The Intelligencer.

Eagle populations have been steadily declining in the United States and Pennsylvania for almost 150 years, especially since the widespread use of DDT, a pesticide.

Federal legislation, including the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act, has slowly helped bald eagles regain some of their former territory.

Only 500 bald eagles existed in the United States in 1960, a number which grew to 6,000 by 2000, according to officials.

Other known bald eagle nests exist in Green Lane Park and the Tinicum Wildlife Refuge.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

More from Upper Moreland-Willow Grove