The White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) is a species of eagle native to the Old World and is one of the five extant species of sea eagle, which is any member of the genus Haliaeetus, the others being the White-Bellied Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus leucogaster), the Solomon Eagle (Haliaeetus sanfordi), the Steller's Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus pelagicus), and the Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), there are five recognized subspecies of white-tailed sea eagle: the East Asian White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla altaicus), the West Asian White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla caspicus), the South European White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla graecus), the North European White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla albicilla), and the Arctic White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla groenlandicus).
Thanks for adding deapht to the many different species. In addition, when standing in Norway, on shore, or on a boat, we see "havørn". Hav means ocean (could in some cases be sea) and ørn means eagle. In this particular location there are 25 couples of white tailed eagles nesting. Luckily the population has grown along the entire coast, a coast line only surpassed by Canada in length. Hence they have a wast coast to surface area to thrive in. Still, its getting crowded now and conflicts between these eagles is not uncommon now. We have only two more species of eagles in norway, one called "fiskeørn"(Osprey) then the "kongeørn" (Golden eagle.)
In case you should know, ospreys are not eagles, eagles are any member of the family Aquilidae, while the ospreys are the only extant genus of the family Pandionidae.
@@indyreno2933 Yes, hoverer, when you meet a Norwegian, you will hear the word "ørn" :-) Its in the hawk family. But in the language its an eagle... confusing. Same as feeling and emotions are mixed even if they are different.
@PardElektronica, actually, in case you should know, eagles (family Aquilidae) are the only extant family of the superfamily Aquiloidea, while both families Accipitridae (Hawks, Buzzards, Harriers, and Kites) and Pandionidae (Ospreys and Fossil Relatives) belong to the superfamily Accipitroidea, both Aquiloidea and Accipitroidea are superfamilies belonging to the suborder Accipitres as two of its four extant superfamilies, in addition to Accipitres being one of the three extant suborders of birds of prey (order Falconiformes), among the suborder Accipitres, the superfamily Sagittarioidea (contains Sagittariidae) evolved first, then followed by Aquiloidea (contains Aquilidae), leaving the most recent split to be between the superfamilies Accipitroidea (contains Accipitridae and Pandionidae) and Aegypioidea (contains Aegypiidae), in case you should also know, there are nine extant families of birds of prey (order Falconiformes): Cariamidae (Seriemas), Sagittariidae (Secretarybird and Fossil Relatives), Aquilidae (Eagles), Accipitridae (Hawks, Buzzards, Harriers, and Kites), Pandionidae (Ospreys and Fossil Relatives), Aegypiidae (Old World Vultures), Caracaridae (Caracaras), Falconidae (Falcons, Kestrels, Hobbies, Falconets, and Montanaguila), and Cathartidae (New World Vultures).
White tailed eagle in Flatanger. The Eagle's Flight. 👍
Very nice - I love these eagles...
Thank you 🙂
Great footage, all clips are at real speed, no slo-mo added?
@@stephenwelch7197 thank you😊 they are filmed in 60p and some of the sequences as reduced in speed to reveal details of motion😊
Good vdo❤❤❤
Thank you 🙂
The White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla) is a species of eagle native to the Old World and is one of the five extant species of sea eagle, which is any member of the genus Haliaeetus, the others being the White-Bellied Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus leucogaster), the Solomon Eagle (Haliaeetus sanfordi), the Steller's Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus pelagicus), and the Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), there are five recognized subspecies of white-tailed sea eagle: the East Asian White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla altaicus), the West Asian White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla caspicus), the South European White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla graecus), the North European White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla albicilla), and the Arctic White-Tailed Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus albicilla groenlandicus).
Thanks for adding deapht to the many different species. In addition, when standing in Norway, on shore, or on a boat, we see "havørn". Hav means ocean (could in some cases be sea) and ørn means eagle. In this particular location there are 25 couples of white tailed eagles nesting. Luckily the population has grown along the entire coast, a coast line only surpassed by Canada in length. Hence they have a wast coast to surface area to thrive in. Still, its getting crowded now and conflicts between these eagles is not uncommon now. We have only two more species of eagles in norway, one called "fiskeørn"(Osprey) then the "kongeørn" (Golden eagle.)
In case you should know, ospreys are not eagles, eagles are any member of the family Aquilidae, while the ospreys are the only extant genus of the family Pandionidae.
@@indyreno2933 Yes, hoverer, when you meet a Norwegian, you will hear the word "ørn" :-) Its in the hawk family. But in the language its an eagle... confusing. Same as feeling and emotions are mixed even if they are different.
@PardElektronica, actually, in case you should know, eagles (family Aquilidae) are the only extant family of the superfamily Aquiloidea, while both families Accipitridae (Hawks, Buzzards, Harriers, and Kites) and Pandionidae (Ospreys and Fossil Relatives) belong to the superfamily Accipitroidea, both Aquiloidea and Accipitroidea are superfamilies belonging to the suborder Accipitres as two of its four extant superfamilies, in addition to Accipitres being one of the three extant suborders of birds of prey (order Falconiformes), among the suborder Accipitres, the superfamily Sagittarioidea (contains Sagittariidae) evolved first, then followed by Aquiloidea (contains Aquilidae), leaving the most recent split to be between the superfamilies Accipitroidea (contains Accipitridae and Pandionidae) and Aegypioidea (contains Aegypiidae), in case you should also know, there are nine extant families of birds of prey (order Falconiformes): Cariamidae (Seriemas), Sagittariidae (Secretarybird and Fossil Relatives), Aquilidae (Eagles), Accipitridae (Hawks, Buzzards, Harriers, and Kites), Pandionidae (Ospreys and Fossil Relatives), Aegypiidae (Old World Vultures), Caracaridae (Caracaras), Falconidae (Falcons, Kestrels, Hobbies, Falconets, and Montanaguila), and Cathartidae (New World Vultures).