Harpy Eagle
Harpia harpyja
The harpy eagle, Harpia harpyja, is a huge forest eagle of tropical Central and South America. It has broad wings for maneuvering through canopy gaps, a double crest that lifts when alert, a banded tail, gray and white body plumage, and extremely powerful feet with long talons. Harpy eagles hunt mainly in mature forest, taking sloths, monkeys, large birds, and other arboreal animals from the canopy. Pairs use large territories and often nest in emergent trees, where a single chick may depend on the adults for many months.
Because of its size, low breeding rate, and need for intact forest, the harpy eagle is managed through conservation programs, zoo breeding, rescue work, and community nest protection rather than private ownership. Field teams monitor nests, fit tracking devices, and work with landowners to reduce shooting and disturbance. Deforestation fragments territories and can leave young birds without enough prey, so protected corridors and mature nesting trees matter. In zoos or rehabilitation centers, harpy eagles require large secure aviaries, experienced raptor staff, whole-prey diets, and careful pairing; a bird recovering from injury must retain flight strength and feather condition before any release is considered.
Colors: Wild Type