Bald
Eagles Die at Alaska Fish Processing Plant
At
least 19 bald eagles died Friday after gorging themselves on
a truck full of fish waste outside a processing plant.
Fifty or more eagles swarmed into the truck, whose
retractable fabric cover was open, after the truck was moved outside
the plant, said Brandon Saito, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service who coordinated the recovery operation.
The birds became too soiled to fly or clean themselves, and with
temperatures in the mid-teens, began to succumb to the cold. Some
birds became so weak they sank into the fish slime and were crushed.
The truck's contents had to be dumped onto the floor of the Ocean
Beauty Seafoods plant so the birds could be retrieved. Some tried
to scatter, but since they couldn't fly, wildlife officers soon
retrieved them. The eagles were then cleaned with dish soap in
tubs of warm water to remove the oily slime and warm them.
The survivors were taken to a heated fish and wildlife warehouse
to recover, though some were in critical condition. Saito said
they would be released as soon as they were dry and strong enough.
The dead birds will be shipped to a U.S. Department of Interior
clearinghouse, where Native American groups could apply to be given
the birds or their feathers for ceremonial purposes.
Requests for interviews from Ocean Beauty officials were not returned.
Commercial fishing is the main industry in Kodiak, a city of about
6,000 on Kodiak Island on the south coast of Alaska.