Photo: Bruce Bennett/Getty

Some good news! The American bald eagle is making a strong comeback.
The species grew to 316,700 birds and 71,400 nesting pairs in the lower 48 states during the 2019 breeding season, per the report.
American bald eagles were previously removed from the list of threatened or endangered species in 2007, theAssociated Pressreported. They are also now protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act,CNNadded.
Jesse Wild/Digital Camera magazine via Getty

“Today’s announcement is truly a historic conservation success story. Announcements like ours today give me hope,” U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said in a statement. “I believe that we have the opportunity of a lifetime to protect our environment and our way of life for generations to come.”
“But we will only accomplish great things if we work together,” she added.
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In a statement to theAP, Haaland also said, “the bald eagle population continues to thrive” and called the animal’s reemergence a “success story [that] is a testament to the enduring importance of the work of the Interior Department scientists and conservationists.”
“This work could not have been done without teams of people collecting and analyzing decades' worth of science … accurately estimating the bald eagle population here in the United States,” she added to the outlet.
American bald eagle populations had previously declined at a severe rate from 1870 to 1970, CNN reported.
The animal’s population continued to decrease over the years due to hunting, habitat loss, and the use of pesticides with DDT, the outlet adds. DDT.
source: people.com