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Killing of Philippine eagle sparks calls for tougher laws to save critically endangered bird

  • Some 392 pairs live in the country’s forests that are also home to indigenous communities who rely on poaching to get by

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A Philippine eagle died from severe blood loss after it was shot in a forest in the southern part of the country. Photo: Handout/Klaus Nigge-Philippine Eagle Foundation

The death of a Philippine eagle from a gunshot wound has sparked calls to intensify conservation efforts and pass new laws to protect the critically endangered species that increasingly come in the cross hairs of hunters.

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The bird named “Mangayon”, estimated to be around four years old, died this week in a southern Philippine forest from sepsis and loss of blood after its left wing was clipped by a toy marble fired from an improvised airgun.

The dying raptor was found in an area previously unknown as a “nesting site”, indicating other eagles could also be there.

The incident resulted in an outpouring of grief on social media and at the Davao-based Philippine Eagle Foundation, which has rescued 19 injured birds since 2020.

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Jayson Ibañez, the agency’s director for operations and chief scientist, described the Philippine eagle as wild and fierce, flying freely with the broadest wingspan of up to two metres, perching magnificently as the tallest standing forest eagle in the world.

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