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Mission:
The Alaska Raptor Center's mission is threefold:
- To provide
medical treatment for injured bald eagles and other birds,
- To teach
people about Alaska's birds and environmental conservation,
and
- To conduct
bald eagle research.
Each year, the Alaska Raptor Center provides medical treatment to
approximately 200 injured bald eagles and other birds. Our goal is to
release our patients back into the wild; some, however, are injured so
severely they could not survive in the wild even after rehabilitation.
These birds may join our Raptors-in-Residence, providing excitement
and education for more than 40,000 annual visitors and for the 14,000
schoolchildren we reach through the Adopt-A-Raptor program and
classroom presentations around the country.
Bald
Eagle Flight Training Center:
Here
at the Alaska Raptor Center, we've been working diligently toward
raising the necessary funds for construction of a state-of-the-art
flight-training facility to provide better diagnosis and
rehabilitation for injured birds. This 20,000-square-foot structure
will be added to our existing 6,000-square-foot building here in
Sitka, giving us the necessary facilities for diagnosis, treatment,
feeding, housing and rehabilitation of our patients. In addition, it
will provide visitors with exceptional wildlife viewing opportunities
and further enhance the award-winning educational visitor experiences
we provide to help people understand animals - and the birds won't be
bothered, thanks to the non-reflective, one-way glass that will
separate our patients and their admirers.
The
most important benefit of the flight-training center is that it will
enable eagles to regain their flight skills. Despite their great
wingspan, bald eagles are quite nimble in the air - agility plays a
critical role in their ability to hunt, protect territory, avoid
collision and practice courtship rituals. Our facility will enable
rehabilitators to place obstacles high, low, left or right in the
flight tube, giving the birds increased challenges to test their
strength and agility.
In
addition, the birds will have the ability to fish for salmon in a
waterfall and pond, a simulation for their habits in the wild. This
enclosed coastal rainforest area will give rehabilitators the
opportunity to gauge a bird's willingness to hunt and, thus, his
readiness for release back into the wild.
This
flight center also will help us fulfill our mission in many new and
unique ways, especially when it comes to education. We currently teach
more than 40,000 visitors a year on bald eagles and other raptors, as
well as about their habitats. The new flight-training center will
magnify the educational opportunities available to our visitors.
Education
Programs:
Our
educational programs touch the lives of thousands of schoolchildren
each year. Classroom visits are a powerful way to teach children the
importance of wildlife and environmental conservation, and they offer
truly unique and exciting memories - for everyone involved.
Alaska Air Warriors:
Imagine one
of Alaska's wild eagles coming into a classroom in your
neighborhood
Watching the students' eyes get as big as, well, an
owl's as they turn their attention to their feathered guest, listening
as the flood of questions about the bird fills the classroom
Imagine being able to watch the students as they learn about Alaska's
wild birds with a live eagle ambassador from the Alaska Raptor Center.
The Alaska
Raptor Center's "Alaska Air Warriors" program does just
that. To teach people about Alaska's wild birds and environmental
conservation, our "Raptors-in-Residence" travel with their
handlers to classrooms across the country, from Alaska to Florida to
New York, and points in between. Schoolchildren learn more about the
birds, their habitats and Alaska firsthand during these up-close
visits.
Our classroom
visits focus upon Alaska's wildlife and conservation, and, of course,
the important role bald eagles and other birds have in the
environment. Our education birds - including our "chief
ambassador," Volta, the bald eagle - are powerful and effective
teachers who leave a lasting impression on those who meet them.
Classroom visits are customized by age, from elementary school through
high school - children of all ages share a common thrill in a visit
from Volta or another of our birds.
Adopt-A-Raptor
Program:
The
Alaska Raptor Center's Adopt-A-Raptor program allows people around the
world to help us care for Alaska's wild birds. By becoming an adoptive
"parent," you help support the daily care, feeding and any
required medical treatment for your adopted bird.
Adoptive
"parents" receive an official adoption certificate, a
photograph and biography of the adopted bird, natural history
information, and a one-year membership to the Alaska Raptor Center.
Teachers also can bring Alaska's wildlife into their classrooms with the
Alaska Raptor Center's "Adopt-A-Raptor" program. Classes
help provide for the daily care, feeding and medical treatment of
their adopted bird. In return, teachers receive curriculum materials
to help plan lessons on raptors and their habitats; an adoption
certificate and photo of the adopted bird to display in the classroom;
natural history and information on the bird; and a one-year membership
to the Alaska Raptor Center. Most important, the students learn about
stewardship and caring for wild animals, building a foundation and
appreciation for nature conservation they can develop as they grow.
Passport Program:
Kids, come to the Alaska Raptor Center for an amazing adventure of
learning and excitement! Take a two-hour trek through this wild bald
eagle hospital. Stop at each of 12 educational stations and learn
about bald eagles, owls and other types of raptors. Visit the clinic
window and learn how the veterinary staff treat the injured patients.
Touch eagle and owl feathers and feel the difference between bird and
mammal bones at the artifact table. Walk through the temperate rain
forest, learn about medicinal plants and trees, and learn of the plant
life that supports most Alaska's wildlife.
While
along the river trail, you will visit the muskeg area, a spongy moss
environment, and learn of its many uses while watching and listening
for wildlife. Meet many of the Raptors-in-Residence and discover how
unique each species is, and how they survive in the wild. On returning
to the Center, hot chocolate is served.
Research
and Conservation:
DDT,
heavy metal poisoning and loss of habitat nearly wiped out bald eagle
populations in the 1960s and 1970s - by the time DDT was banned in
1972, there were fewer than 450 breeding pairs of bald eagles left in
the continental United States. In 1978, the bald eagle was added to
the Endangered Species List.
Through
both rehabilitation and research, the Alaska Raptor Center seeks a
better understanding of what is normal in the health and life of bald
eagles. In addition to releasing hundreds of bald eagles back into the
wild over the years, the Center has provided eagles to breeding
programs in the lower 48 states.
Through
rehabilitation and placement efforts, the Alaska Raptor Center has had
a helping hand in the resurgence of bald eagle populations, resulting
in the nation's symbol being removed from the endangered species list
in July 1999 and downlisted to "threatened." Now, the bald
eagle population is estimated to be about 100,000, with half of those
found in Alaska.
How Can You Help?
Membership:
Support
from members helps the Alaska Raptor Center fulfill our mission of
rehabilitating injured bald eagles and other wild birds, teaching the
public about Alaska's birds and the importance of environmental
conservation, and conducting bald eagle research.
Members of the Alaska Raptor Center receive our quarterly newsletter, the
Mew Review, to keep up-to-date on happenings here at the Center - and
it's a great way to get a bit of Alaska in your mailbox. Members also
receive our gift shop catalog and other special mailings throughout
the year. And, best of all, you help us heal injured bald eagles and
other wild birds.
Volunteering:
Each year, volunteers from around the world donate their time - from a
couple of days to a couple of months - to the Alaska Raptor Center. In
2000, 65 volunteers contributed more than 3,500 hours, doing
everything from feeding the birds and cleaning the mews to helping out
in the business office and maintaining the Center's facilities.
Visiting:
Visiting
Sitka soon? Be sure to come to the Alaska Raptor Center! We're open
for tours May through September and our operating hours are Sunday
through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
You'll
see our 23 Raptors-in-Residence, including bald and golden eagles,
hawks, falcons and owls, and learn about their habitats and how they
came to be permanent residents at the Center.
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