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In 2022, state officials and volunteers monitored 267 territorial pairs of bald eagles throughout New Jersey. Of those, 250 were active breeding pairs, an increase of 28 from 2021, according to ...
The federal government removed the bald eagle from its list of endangered species in 2007. New Jersey kept the bird on its state list because of disturbances to nests and habitat threats. The use of ...
New Jersey officials on Monday proposed removing the bald eagle from the state's endangered species list, ... As of 2023, there were 267 nesting pairs of bald eagles in every county in New Jersey.
Across this state we’re in, the bald eagle population has been growing since the 1980s, when eagles were on the brink of vanishing from New Jersey because of the pesticide DDT (dichloro-diphenyl ...
TRENTON -- The nonprofit Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New Jersey (CWF) today released the 2015 Bald Eagle Report, highlighting the number of nesting pairs, active nests and nest productivity ...
Now a New Jersey resident and Philadelphia Eagles fan, he regularly goes out in his green “Birds” cap and binoculars. “Just the mere thrill of seeing one — a lot of people just have never, ever looked ...
New Jersey Wildlife: The iconic bald eagle is here to stay. Published: Feb. 21, 2014, 12:00 p.m. By . John Parke; As I drove along Route 46 in Oxford, admiring how the snow blanketed the trees and ...
Bald eagle rescued from communications tower in New Jersey. A bald eagle was rescued from a public safety communications tower in Monmouth County, New Jersey, after its left wing got caught on an ...
New Jersey is proposing removing the bald eagle and osprey from its endangered species list. By Mike Catalini • Published June 3, 2024 • Updated on June 5, 2024 at 8:00 am NBC Universal, Inc.
New Jersey proposed Monday removing the bald eagle from its endangered species list, citing a rebound since more than four decades ago, when a single nesting pair in a remote county were the only ...
New Jersey began trying to reverse the decline in the early 1980s by bringing in eagles from Canada, along with artificial incubation and fostering efforts, the department said.
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