Below is the Introduction to the Guidelines, go here for the complete
25-page National Bald Eagle Management Guidelines (PDF).
INTRODUCTION
The bald eagle (Haliaeetus
leucocephalus) is protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection
Act (Eagle Act) and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA). The MBTA and the
Eagle Act protect bald eagles from a variety of harmful actions and
impacts. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) developed these
National Bald Eagle Management Guidelines to advise landowners, land
managers, and others who share public and private lands with bald eagles
when and under what circumstances the protective provisions of the Eagle
Act may apply to their activities. A variety of human activities can
potentially interfere with bald eagles, affecting their ability to forage,
nest, roost, breed, or raise young. The Guidelines are intended to help
people minimize such impacts to bald eagles, particularly where they may
constitute “disturbance,” which is prohibited by the Eagle Act.
The Guidelines are intended to:
(1) Publicize the provisions of the Eagle Act that continue to protect
bald eagles, in order to reduce the possibility that people will violate
the law,
(2) Advise landowners, land managers and the general public of the
potential for various human activities to disturb bald eagles, and
(3) Encourage additional nonbinding land management practices that
benefit bald eagles (see Additional Recommendations section).
While the Guidelines include general recommendations for land management
practices that will benefit bald eagles, the document is intended primarily
as a tool for landowners and planners who seek information and
recommendations regarding how to avoid disturbing bald eagles. Many States
and some tribal entities have developed state-specific management plans,
regulations, and/or guidance for landowners and land managers to protect
and enhance bald eagle habitat, and we encourage the continued development and
use of these planning tools to benefit bald eagles.
Adherence to the Guidelines herein will benefit individuals, agencies,
organizations, and companies by helping them avoid violations of the law.
However, the Guidelines themselves are not law. Rather, they are
recommendations based on several decades of behavioral observations,
science, and conservation measures to avoid or minimize adverse impacts to
bald eagles.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service strongly encourages adherence to
these guidelines to ensure that bald and golden eagle populations will
continue to be sustained. The Service realizes there may be impacts to some
birds even if all reasonable measures are taken to avoid such impacts.
Although it is not possible to absolve individuals and entities from
liability under the Eagle Act or the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA), the
Service exercises enforcement discretion to focus on those individuals,
companies, or agencies that take migratory birds without regard for the
consequences of their actions and the law, especially when conservation
measures, such as these Guidelines, are available, but have not been
implemented. The Service will prioritize its enforcement efforts to focus
on those individuals or entities who take bald eagles or their parts, eggs,
or nests without implementing appropriate measures recommended by the
Guidelines.
The Service intends to pursue the development of regulations that would
authorize, under limited circumstances, the use of permits if
“take” of an eagle is anticipated but unavoidable. Additionally,
if the bald eagle is delisted, the Service intends to provide a regulatory
mechanism to honor existing (take) authorizations under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA).
During the interim period until the Service completes a rulemaking for
permits under the Eagle Act, the Service does not intend to refer for
prosecution the incidental “take” of any bald eagle under the
MBTA or Eagle Act, if such take is in full compliance with the terms and
conditions of an incidental take statement issued to the action agency or
applicant under the authority of section 7(b)(4) of the ESA or a permit
issued under the authority of section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA.
The Guidelines are applicable throughout the
United
States
, including
Alaska
. The primary purpose of these
Guidelines is to provide information that will minimize or prevent
violations only of Federal laws governing bald eagles. In addition to
Federal laws, many states and some smaller jurisdictions and tribes have
additional laws and regulations protecting bald eagles. In some cases those
laws and regulations may be more protective (restrictive) than these
Federal guidelines. If you are planning activities that may affect bald
eagles, we therefore recommend that you contact both your nearest U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service Field Office (pdf) and
your state wildlife agency for assistance.
LEGAL PROTECTIONS FOR THE BALD
EAGLE
The Bald and Golden Eagle
Protection Act
The Eagle Act (16 U.S.C. 668-668c), enacted in 1940, and amended several times
since then, prohibits anyone, without a permit issued by the Secretary of
the Interior, from “taking” bald eagles, including their parts,
nests, or eggs. The Act provides criminal and civil penalties for persons
who “take, possess, sell, purchase, barter, offer to sell,
purchase or barter, transport, export or import, at any time or any manner,
any bald eagle ... [or any golden eagle], alive or dead, or any part, nest,
or egg thereof.” The Act defines “take” as “pursue,
shoot, shoot at, poison, wound, kill, capture, trap, collect, molest or
disturb.” “Disturb’’ means:
"Disturb means to agitate or bother a bald or golden eagle to a
degree that causes, or is likely to cause, based on the best scientific
information available, 1) injury to an eagle, 2) a decrease in its
productivity, by substantially interfering with normal breeding, feeding,
or sheltering behavior, or 3) nest abandonment, by substantially
interfering with normal breeding, feeding, or sheltering behavior."
In addition to immediate impacts, this definition also covers impacts
that result from human-induced alterations initiated around a previously
used nest site during a time when eagles are not present, if, upon the
eagle's return, such alterations agitate or bother an eagle to a degree
that injures an eagle or substantially interferes with normal breeding,
feeding, or sheltering habits and causes, or is likely to cause, a loss of
productivity or nest abandonment.
A violation of the Act can result in a criminal fine of $100,000
($200,000 for organizations), imprisonment for one year, or both, for a
first offense. Penalties increase substantially for additional offenses,
and a second violation of this Act is a felony.
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act
The MBTA (16 U.S.C. 703-712), prohibits the taking of any migratory bird
or any part, nest, or egg, except as permitted by regulation. The MBTA was
enacted in 1918; a 1972 agreement supplementing one of the bilateral
treaties underlying the MBTA had the effect of expanding the scope of the
Act to cover bald eagles and other raptors. Implementing regulations define
“take” under the MBTA as “pursue, hunt, shoot, wound,
kill, trap, capture, possess, or collect.”
Copies of the Eagle Act and the MBTA are available at: http://permits.fws.gov/ltr/ltr.shtml.
State laws and regulations
Most states have their own regulations and/or guidelines for bald eagle
management. Some states may continue to list the bald eagle as endangered,
threatened, or of special concern. If you plan activities that may affect
bald eagles, we urge you to familiarize yourself with the regulations
and/or guidelines that apply to bald eagles in your state.
Your adherence to the Guidelines herein does not ensure that you are in
compliance with state laws and regulations because state regulations can be
more specific and/or restrictive than these Guidelines.
Go here for the complete 25-page National Bald Eagle
Management Guidelines (PDF).
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