dunno the exact figure but very few are left. they already endangered species
2007-01-25 23:43:45
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There was a great decline in Central Europe, and the Golden Eagle is now restricted to the higher central Appennine regions of Italy (the regional capital of Abruzzo is named after the Latin/Italian word for eagle, L'Aquila), and the Alps. In Britain, there are about 420 pairs left in the Scottish highlands, and between 1969 and 2004 they bred in the English Lake District. In North America the situation is not as dramatic, but there has still been a noticeable decline.
2007-01-25 23:16:17
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answer #2
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answered by angel 4
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10
2007-01-26 03:00:07
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answer #3
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answered by dream theatre 7
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LOL, sorry couldn't resist: I thought Cessna stopped making the C421 Golden Eagle!
But seriously folks, Here is a good article on them to get you started...
Would be nice if people cared more about conservation and cared about the things that people are destroying-- habitat for humanity is killing animal habitats! There's got to be a compromise.
2007-01-26 01:25:50
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answer #4
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answered by ~XenoFluX 3
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tens of thousands. The golden eagle is the most common eagle in the world, the are found in every continent except the arctic and ant-arctic.
They are certainly not rare.
2007-01-26 11:51:40
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answer #5
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answered by Aquila 4
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