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New Brunswick

Rare eagle native to eastern Russia spotted in New Brunswick

While working along the Restigouche River between the border of New Brunswick and Quebec, Forest Condo, a ranger with the Listuguj Mi'kmaq First Nation, came across a Steller's eagle, a bird native to eastern Russia and rarely seen in North America.

Steller's sea eagle seen on island in Restigouche River this week

steller's sea eagle
This Steller's sea eagle was spotted on the Restigouche River in northern New Brunswick. (Andrew Olive)

The New Brunswick sighting of an eaglenative to eastern Russia is generating excitementacross North America's bird-watching community.

Forest Condo, a fisheries ranger with the ListugujMi'kmaq First Nation, was on the Restigouche River as part of his job on Monday evening, when he came across a Steller's sea eagle perched in a tree on Gillis Island.

Speaking to birder Alain Clavette, Condo said he at first thought the bird might have been one of the dozens of bald eagles that regularly prey on sea bass in the area, but a closer look revealed its noticeably large, bright yellow beak and unique white patcheson its wings.

"I was dumbfoundedlike, wow, what is this?" Condo said.

"So I Googled it and that's what came up the Steller's eagle and I was like, really, really surprised. What'sthat doing in our area?Abirdthat should have been in Russia."

Forest Condo, a fisheries ranger with Listuguj Mi'kmaq First Nation, was the one who first spotted the Steller's sea eagle. (Submitted by Forest Condo)

Condo said he told local biologist Carole-AnneGillis about the sighting, and the next morning, she and others were on the river to get a look at it themselves.

"It's certainly made for a lot of excitement, and there's a lot of birders right now looking at it. It's still there," Condo said.

Speaking onCBC'sShift, Clavette said seeing a Steller's sea eagle in New Brunswick is a "mega rarity."

"To see a Steller's sea eagleat this time of year, I would have to be on some islands off the coast of Russia," he said.

"Or I would have to take a trip in the wintertime to go to Japan. Very spectacular."

A post about the eagle's sighting on the American Birding Association's rare bird alert Facebook page generated more than 800 reactions and 70 comments within nine hours on Wednesday, with somelamenting howthe Canada-U.S. border restrictions prevented themfrom getting a chance to see the bird themselves.

"Open the border, Justin! You know for Canada Day. No other reason,"Kirby Adams commented the day before the holiday.

Clavette said a Steller's sea eagle was last spotted in Texas about three months ago, adding the one seen in New Brunswick could be the same bird.

He said the only thing that could detract from the rare sighting would be if it were determined the bird had actually escaped from captivity, and not flown all the way from Russia or Japan.

"If we do havenews that one was an escapee from a zoo in the last couple of months, it would put a big damper on this sighting because, of course, it would not count fora birder's list," he said.

"Nonetheless, very impressive, and I think that there is apossibility that this guy is just a traveller, and that it could be the same bird that was spotted in Texas."

With files from Shift NB