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Eagle

From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.

For other uses, see Eagle (disambiguation).
Eagle
Closeup view of an Australian Wedge-tailed Eagle showing the hooked beak.
Closeup view of an
Australian Wedge-tailed Eagle
showing the hooked beak.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Accipitriformes*
Family:Accipitridae
Genera

Several, see below.
 *see Accipitriformes for family list

Eagles are large birds of prey, which are found mainly in the Old World, with only two species (Bald Eagle and Golden Eagle) in North America, a few in South America and two, (White-bellied Sea Eagle and Wedge-tailed Eagle), in Australia. They are members of the bird order Falconiformes, family Accipitridae and belong to several different genera, not necessarily closely related to each other.

In Britain before 1678, Eagle referred specifically to the Golden Eagle, the other native species, the White-tailed Eagle, being known as the Erne. The modern name for Aquila chrysaetos was introduced by the naturalist John Ray.

Like all birds of prey, eagles have very large powerful hooked beaks for tearing flesh from their prey, strong legs and powerful talons. They also have extremely keen eyesight to enable them to spot potential prey from a distance. This keen eyesight is primarily contributed by their extremely large pupils which cause minimal diffraction (spreading) of the incoming light.

Contents

Taxonomy

For many years there has been some scientistic debate as to whether the Accipitriformes are a separate order, or belong to the Falconiformes.

Major new research into eagle taxonomy suggests that the important genera Aquila and Hieraaetus are not composed of nearest relatives, and it is likely that a reclassification of these genera will soon take place, with some species being moved to Lophaetus or Ictinaetus.

Steller's Sea Eagle in Edinburgh Zoo
Enlarge
Steller's Sea Eagle in Edinburgh Zoo


Current species classification

Eagles appear prominently in myth and literature. In the Old World, such references are commonly to the Golden Eagle (or possibly closely related species found in warm climates).

Eagles as national birds

The eagle has been used by many nations as a national symbol, depicting power, beauty and independence.

  • Poland. A white eagle on a red field is the coat of arms of Poland.
  • Germany and Prussia. Prussia, and later Germany have use a black eagle as their national symbol.
  • Ancient Egypt. The Ptolemaic rulers of Egypt used it as their seal
  • Ancient Rome. The Romans used it on the standards of their armies.
  • Byzantine Empire and Russia. After the fall of Rome, Constantinople chose a two-headed golden eagle as Monarchy symbol. One head symbolised ancient Rome, and the other head symbolised the "new Rome" sited at Constantinople. After the fall of Constantinople, the Russian Empire took the two-headed eagle as own symbol.
  • Charlemagne and Holy Roman Empire. After his crowned as new Roman Emperor, Charlemagne adopted the ancient Roman eagle as own symbol. The Holy Roman Empire born of his kingdom took the eagle, but Habsburgs replaced the golden eagle by an imperial eagle.
  • Spain. The "Catholic Kings", Isabella and Ferdinand took the golden eagle as a part of royal shield. The eagle was on the Spanish shield until 1978.
Napoleonic eagle
Enlarge
Napoleonic eagle
  • First French Empire. Napoleon Bonaparte recovered the Roman golden eagle as the symbol of his new French empire.
  • Modern Europe. The eagle is also part of the coat of arms of Romania and the coat of arms and flag of Moldova. It is the emblem of "Shqipëria" or Land of the Eagles, which is known in English as Albania (see The Tale of the Eagle for the legendary origin of the name).
  • Mexico. The bird on the Mexican coat of arms and flag is a Golden Eagle.
  • The Philippines. The endangered Philippine Eagle is the national bird of the Philippines.
  • USA. The United States has adopted the North American Bald Eagle as its national emblem. Although the Golden Eagle is found in North America, U.S. references to an unspecified "eagle" are often to the Bald Eagle; this point was not realized by a USA coin die engraver, who, told to depict "an eagle", depicted a Golden Eagle; this error is the cause of the expression "illegal eagle".

External link

See also

eo:Aglo fr:Aigle (oiseau) it:Aquila chrysaetos ms:Burung helang ja:鷲 nl:Adelaar nn:Ørn pt:Águia simple:Eagle sv:Örn zh:鹰

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Eagle (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eagle&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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