A young man named Fahd Qash from Jizan region, Saudi Arabia found something unexpected in the swamp on his walk
What he found was a dead eagle with a tracking device around its neck. Upon closer inspection, the man saw that the device had the owner’s email on it.
As it later turned out, the GPS has been fitted in Kazakhstan
The tracking device has saved all the locations the eagle has been to. Turns out, scientists were doing an experiment where they attached GPS on supposedly 20 eagles and marked every single place they visited in one year. These birds have crossed many countries, but, interestingly enough, it stayed clear of the sea.
The map below shows all the traveling that these eagles did in one year
These eagles have crossed many countries in the Middle East and, it is not sure why they avoided the Caspian as well as Red Sea.
Researchers team called “British Birds” have tracked 16 Steppe eagles before and found out that the longest daily flight distance among all tracked eagles was approximately 355km. They have also recorded that through a complete annual cycle, an eagle spends around 31.5% in the wintering area, 41.9% in the breeding area and the rest 26.6% on migration. These statistics, as well as the map, once again prove that eagles are a constantly moving and migrating creature who travels more in their lifetimes than you could ever imagine.
This map did receive a lot of attention online with people trying to guess why did these eagles migrate the way they did