The bald eagles featured on the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources' EagleCam have their first chick of 2017.
The egg hatched today Thursday, March 9, and the second egg has a pip (scientific term for the hole the chick makes with its egg tooth on the end of its beak) that is getting larger. There might be three chicks by the weekend!
Biologists were concerned that the first egg might not hatch, as it was left in the cold for quite some time immediately after hatching. The pair has proven they have this incubation thing under control.
This is the fifth year DNR’s Nongame program has streamed live video from a bald eagle nest. The eagle pair has been photographed regularly throughout the year, near their nest and surrounding areas.
The EagleCam is a project of the DNR's Nongame Wildlife Program. To learn more, visit www.dnr.state.mn.us/eco/nongame/index.html
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To watch the live video stream, visit www.dnr.state.mn.us/features/webcams/eaglecam/index.html
