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Falconry display at Sheffield Medieval Festival
Close up detail of a majestic golden eagle soaring in clear blue sky and looking at camera. Photographed in Western Australia.
Wedge-tailed eagle
Australian wedge tailed eagle in the wild in Central Victoria perched in a eucalyptus tree
A wedge tailed eagle (Aquila audax) in the bright sky in Western Australia
Wedge-tailed Eagle - Aquila audax largest bird of prey in Australia, also found in New Guinea and Tasmania, brown strong hunter ranging from desert to plains to mountainous areas to forest.
Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax) in Queensland, Australia.
The wedge-tailed eagle is the largest bird of prey in the continent of Australia. It is also found in southern New Guinea to the north and is distributed as far south as the state of Tasmania.
Taxon name: Mainland Wedge-tailed Eagle\nTaxon scientific name: Aquila audax audax\nLocation: Sturt National park, New South Wales, Australia
Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax)
Striated Caracara; Phalcoboenus australis, aka Johnny Rook in flight over a bay on Carcass Island; Falklands Islands
Majestic wedge-tailed eagle sit on a tree in Gold Coast Queensland Australia
a black kite in flight in the Nogoro-Ngoro National Park – Tanzania
the wedge tail eagle has brown to black feathers, the darker the feathers the older the bird
Taking off from rocky cliffs, a golden eagle having just killed and dropped a cormorant in Watereton Canyon in Littleton Colorado, takes off, flies, glides and lands near his dropped prey.
Australian animal bird portrait
Taxon name: Tasmanian Wedge-tailed Eagle\nTaxon scientific name: Aquila audax fleayi\nLocation: Tinderbox Reserve, Tasmania, Australia
Wedge-tailed eagle in the Australian outback sitting on a fence post
Australian wedge tailed eagle in the wild in Central Victoria perched in a eucalyptus tree
A perched Wedge-tailed Eagle keeps a watchful eye out
Ferocious-looking Wedge-tail Eagle feeding on the road-kill carcass of a small kangaroo.  Feeding Wedge-tails are notoriously difficult to photograph as they are always alert and very edgy, easily spooked.  This huge eagle has a lump of flesh in its sharp beak as it looks up, keeping a wary eye on the photographer and ready to flee at any moment. Horizontal.
White-bellied Sea Eagle with out-streched wings
Flying Hooded Vulture over Zambesi River, Victoria Falls and Zambesi National Park. The Zambesi river forms a natural boundary between Zambia, Zimbabwe and Botswana where  wildlife can be found in the nature reserve and national park but most notable is the largest curtain of falling water in the world, Victoria Falls that has cut a deep zig-zag gorge through the underlying rock to create a dramatic scene known to tourists the world over
A view of a beautiful Tasmanian wedge-tailed eagle on a branch in a garden
Taxon name: Mainland Wedge-tailed Eagle\nTaxon scientific name: Aquila audax audax\nLocation: Sturt National Park, NSW, Australia
Wedge-tailed Eagle (Aquila audax)
Iberian imperial eagle flying
The Wedge-tailed Eagle has long wings (wingspan 2.3 m), a characteristic long, wedge-shaped tail, and legs that are feathered all the way to the base of the toes. The bill is pale pink to cream, the eye brown to dark brown, and the feet off-white. Young Wedge-tailed Eagles are mid brown in colour with reddish-brown heads and wings. They become progressively blacker for at least the first ten years of their lives; adults are mostly dark blackish-brown. The only difference in plumage between the sexes is that a female adult is generally slightly paler than her mate. Females (4.2 kg - 5.3 kg) are also larger and heavier than males (3.2 kg up to 4.0 kg). Wedge-tailed Eagles are Australia's largest raptors (birds of prey).
Osprey bird of prey flying directly over head in golden light with blue sky background
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