Sea eagle superdad supports two families

A male raptor in east Scotland has successfully raised chicks in different areas.

Choose your welcome gift when you subscribe to BBC Wildlife magazine!
Published: August 17, 2017 at 10:19 am

An eight year old male sea eagle, known as Turquoise Z, has managed to look after offspring with two different females at nests more than 45km apart, a first for east Scotland.

Polygamy is rarely recorded in sea eagles, and has only been seen a couple of times in west Scotland – the nests were just a couple of km apart and always resulted in failure.

“We were astonished to discover Turquoise Z had two nests on the go,” says Owen Selly, RSPB Scotland’s sea eagle project officer.

“I really didn’t expect them to succeed but these remarkable birds have beaten the odds.”

Turquoise20Z20by20Richard20Tough_623-59cc07f
Turquoise Z. © Richard Tough

Wing tags that allow the RSPB to identify individual birds helped them to uncover this extraordinary story.

In previous years, Turquoise Z has bred with a female known as Turquoise 1 in Fife. Both were released in 2009 as part of an East Scotland reintroduction programme.

When RSPB Scotland staff saw Turquoise Z in Angus in April, with a female sea eagle known as Red Z, it was thought that he had abandoned his mate in Fife.

However, thanks to the wing tags, the RSPB could confirm that he was visiting the nests in both Fife and Angus, sharing the incubation of the eggs and providing food.

In Fife, Turquoise Z and Turquoise 1 raised a female chick (tagged Blue X), while in Angus, Turquoise Z and Red Z raised another female chick (tagged Blue V).

Both chicks have taken their first flights from their nests, and will start to hunt and leave their parents’ territories in the next few months.

1538.Blue20X.jpg-550x0_623-79b2dd9
Both the chicks have been tagged for future monitoring purposes, this is Blue X from the Fife nest. © Richard Tough

Read more about this story on the RSPB's East Scotland Sea Eagles blog.

Main image: Turquoise Z (male) and 1 (female). © John Cumming

This website is owned and published by Our Media Ltd. www.ourmedia.co.uk
© Our Media 2024