Community Corner

Five Eaglets Hatch In 2 Will County Nests: Preserve

Three eaglets were spotted on April 4 in one nest and two hatchlings were confirmed in a second nest on Friday, the preserve said.

Two eagle nests located in the Forest Preserve District of Will County have produced five eaglets this spring. The hatchlings are a good sign that a rebound of eagles in the area is continuing.
Two eagle nests located in the Forest Preserve District of Will County have produced five eaglets this spring. The hatchlings are a good sign that a rebound of eagles in the area is continuing. (Photo by Forest Preserve staff Chad Merda)

WILL COUNTY, IL — Five eaglets have hatched in two Forest Preserve District of Will County nests this spring, continuing a trend of rebounding eagle numbers in the region over the past decade, according to a news release from the preserve.

Three eaglets were spotted on April 4 in one nest and two hatchlings were confirmed in a second nest on Friday, the preserve said. The eagle parents are busy feeding their fuzzy-headed chicks, which was caught on a Forest Preserve video.

Joel Craig, a volunteer eagle monitor for the Forest Preserve, said in a release that it’s exciting to see the hatchlings, especially the trio in one nest. This is the second time in three years that this nest has produced three eaglets.

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“Seeing the next generation of bald eagles locally makes me extremely happy – and in a sense, relieved,” said Craig, who is a member of the Will County Audubon. “You never know how inclement weather might affect the nests from the time the eggs are laid through the first few weeks in the lives of the eaglets.”

Eagle nests are very large, generally measuring 4 feet to 5 feet wide and 2 feet to 4 feet deep, according to the preserve.

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The eagle baby boom shows that the species is finding Will County a hospitable place to nest, Craig added.

“The way resources are managed within the Forest Preserve District is having an overwhelmingly positive impact on the ecosystems in which these preserves exist,” he said in a release. “This is not only good for the environment, but it’s also a very visible return on the investment of Will County taxpayers and the financial resources with which the Forest Preserve is entrusted.”

Craig said that an increasing number of immature bald eagles in the winter indicates the ones we're seeing now are residents and not migrants. It's also evidence that Will County has good, clean water and a healthy fish population to support them year-round.

"To see eagles rebound like they have in this area in the past 10 years has been pretty exciting," Craig said. "To be threatened and endangered when I was a kid to what we’re seeing now, it's really a population explosion in our area over the past few years.

Eagles and their nests are federally protected, and human interference could cause the birds to abandon the nest and their eggs, the preserve said. The National Audubon Society recommends being at least 330 feet away from a nest, which is about the length of a football field.

To protect these birds, the Forest Preserve said it never publicly disclose nesting locations. If you should come across a nest, be sure to keep your distance.

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