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Viewers raise alarm as wild baby eagle dies on webcam

This still image from streaming online video provided by Biodiversity Research Institute shows an adult bald eagle, center, feeding a young eaglet Wednesday afternoon, June 25, 2014 in a nest at an undisclosed location along coastal Maine. AP Photo/Biodiversity Research Institute

PORTLAND, Maine – Maine wildlife officials are defending their decision not to intervene before an eaglet featured on a wildlife webcam died.

Viewers across the U.S. expressed alarm when it seemed that the parents had abandoned a pair of baby eagles in a coastal Maine nest. One of the eaglets died over the weekend, but the other is still alive.

Erynn Call, state raptor specialist, said it’s common for eaglets to die in nature and that what happened is representative of what happens in other nests. She says it’s the state’s policy not to intervene.

She also says the eaglets weren’t abandoned. She says the parents are simply spending less time at the nest to prepare the eaglets to branch out on their own.

The webcam is operated by the Biodiversity Research Institute.

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