BIRDS OF PREY

Learn the stories behind these majestic raptors of the Yellowstone ecosystem.

A number of years ago, the Grizzly & Wolf Discover Center was presented with the offer to obtain two non-releasable raptors from a small zoo in western Nebraska. Since that time, the GWDC has recognized the value of taking care of numerous birds-of-prey and presenting their stories to our visitors. 

All of the birds that are permitted to reside at the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center have been determined, by veterinarians, to be non-releasable into the wild. Some of the birds have been hit by vehicles and are unable to fly or see well, others have behavioral challenges that make it impossible for survival in the wild.

Come visit the raptor exhibits to see these amazing predators.

 

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Northern saw-whet owl

ACADIA

Acadia is a northern saw-whet owl. These little owls usually eat deer mice, but will also eat other rodents, sometimes insects and the occasional small bird. Averaging only 7″ to 8″ tall, a small bird like Acadia can often get two meals out of one mouse.

She was removed from the wild when she was discovered near Bozeman, Montana lodged in a bike rack after being hit by a car. Now blind in one eye, she is unable to hunt and survive in the wild.

 

Adopt Acadia
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Great horned owl

CLARK

Clark is a female Great Horned Owl that arrived at the GWDC in December of 2016. She was found as a fledgling in 2015 near Billings, MT on the ground under her nest with an eye injury. After spending time at the Montana Raptor Conversation Center, it was determined that she is unable to hunt on her own and therefore can never be released back into the wild.

 

 

 

Adopt Clark
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Great horned owl

STRETCH

Stretch is a male Great Horned Owl that arrived at the GWDC in December of 2016. He and his siblings were found on the ground under their nest near Billings, MT in 2014. After spending time at the Montana Raptor Conversation Center, it was determined that he cannot survive in the wild because he is unable to hunt on his own due to a birth defect in one of his eyes. Great Horned Owls can be easily identified by their horn-like tufts and white patch of feathers on the chest. Their brown, black, white and gray streaked body feathers help them blend well with their surroundings.

Adopt Stretch
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Bald Eagle

ZACK

Bald eagle Zack has a similar story to Josh. He was found in the wild and brought to the Dakota Zoo with a severely dislocated wing. His wing was set back in place but has never been strong enough for him to fly. Although, the details of how Zack’s injury occurred are unclear, the majority of accidents and mortality of eagles is caused by humans. In some areas, large birds of prey like eagles, obtain their food by scavenging along roadsides which causes some to be injured by passing vehicles.

 

Adopt Zack
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Bald Eagle

JORDAN

Jordan arrived at the Center in November of 2014 as a year-old immature Bald Eagle. She had suffered lead poisoning near Bozeman, Montana in 2013 and can no longer survive in the wild due to limited flight mobility. Lead poisoning can cause permanent neurological damage in affected birds, as it did with Jordan. Thanks to the help of volunteers from the Montana Raptor Conservation Center in her rescue, Jordan is now an educational ambassador for the GWDC. 

Adopt Jordan
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Bald Eagle

JOSH

Josh, a male bald eagle, was brought to the Dakota Zoo in Bismarck, North Dakota in 2006. Josh was shot in the left wing resulting in badly fractured bones and the presence of lead particles in his wing. Unfortunately, the wing needed to be amputated at the wrist. He was named after an Army Veteran who served in Iraq. Josh and the other birds-of-prey at the Center are used for outreach programs and educational programs in an effort to generate better understanding and deeper appreciation of the species.

Adopt Josh
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Turkey vulture

LEWIS

When Lewis was a nestling he was brought to a rehabilitation center in Utah with fractures to some of his left wing bones. These bones had begun to heal out of place. As a result, Lewis’s wing does not work correctly and he cannot fly. Turkey vultures can easily be recognized in flight by the way they hold their wings. Their wings are held in an upward-pointing “V” shape, also known as a dihedral.

 

 

Adopt Lewis
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Red-tailed Hawk

LUTA

Luta is a female Red-tailed Hawk who was found in the wild with an injured leg when she was just a juvenile. During her rehabilitation she became imprinted on humans rendering her unable to survive in the wild. For Luta to become imprinted on a human means that she recognizes people as her “parents” or views all people as Red-tailed Hawks.

Red-tailed Hawks are one of the most common raptors in the United States, living everywhere from wilderness areas to Central Park in New York City.

Adopt Luta
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Rough-legged hawk

NAHANI

Nahani is a female rough-legged hawk who was hit by a car near Bozeman, Montana. The accident left Nahani with a shattered humerous in her left wing. This injury was so severe that Nahani was not able to fly leaving her unable to be returned to the wild. Nahani was transferred to the GWDC in 2001 and has adjusted well to captive life.

 

 

 

Adopt Nahani