Spring migration is more or less over for the birds we are tracking. That means that eagles that are going to breed in 2022 should be on their breeding territories, building nests and preparing to lay eggs. Other eagles will not be breeding this year, including birds that are too young and those that are old enough, but have not yet found a territory/mate. A good example of this can be seen from our tracking data for Greater spotted eagle 6488, which was tracked when it did not have a territory in 2020, and when it did in 2021 (See these earlier postings here, here, and here).
Over the next days/weeks I'll try to update the situation with each of the eagles we are tracking. Today is the turn of 6489, a female that was hatched in 2019 (we know this from its plumage) and caught by us on 15 December 2021 at Al Jahra.
Map below. After release, 6489 remained at Al Jahra until the morning of 9 April 2022, when it departed on migration. By 19 April it crossed the northern border of Iran and entered Turkmenistan. It stopped over at a location along the southern boundary of the Aral Sea in Usbekistan during 21 April - 4 May. On 15 May it arrived at Kuspek Lake at Kuspek, Kazakhstan.
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