In the world of nature the strongest survive and the weak die. It's sad but that's the way of nature. That's why the runt of any animal rather it be a wolf, lion, or bird usually die. If the older chick didn't kill the younger one the younger one would've died of starvation and malnutrition because the two older chicks would've taken all the food from the runt.
It looked to me in the beginning of the video, the infant was just trying to stay warm and cuddled up to its siblings. The oldest had no mercy on either of its fellow nestlers and nature took its course sadly! 😢😭
@@stellviahohenheim in times of plenty, usually. But most often there isn't enough food to feed all the little ones, and one ends up eating more and getting bigger than the others.
The sad part of watching wild nests. Heartbreaking for us humans, but what drives these raptors is the survival instinct. Mother nature is seldom a fairy tale.
@@southerngal4655 Well, despite knowing a bit about eagles, I must confess I could not bring myself to watch the whole video. And all for the lack of food. I wonder whether humans would behave any better, in a crisis!
@@AiJaiDeeSaMer Hi. I haven't followed this nest, personally, but I believe there was no regular food supply for two days, which caused the aggression. After that, food supplies became more regular.
The little baby bird was not culled because he was weak, but simply because he was born later and was naturally smaller, which is why he was abused and killed. If he had not been killed, it is quite possible that he would have grown up to be a stronger and smarter eagle than his older brother.
@@michaelvoorhees5978 Eagles don't lay/incubate their eggs all at once. This chick would have been laid last while its siblings got a headstart and hatched first.
@@michaelvoorhees5978 there are many random variables in egg hatching that have nothing to do with genetics. Try to think a little, and stop overusing vowels in your name.
It was freezing. The chicks also go towards the aggressor to try to hide under them and away from beak and claw. Food scarcity was so extreme that even with a full crop the oldest continued to agress. One of the worst nests recorded.
@@charlotter8276 I grew up in a farming/ranching family. We had all kinds of livestock and was around all kinds of wild animals. If I truly felt sad for every animal I saw die or killed, I would be in a mental institution by now. Farmers/ranchers eat the pigs, cows, chickens, etc. that they raise and eat rabbits, squirrels, and deer they kill when hunting. Had large vegetable garden and fruit trees. People who get all their food at the grocery store do not understand that way of life and understand very little about nature. Don't think that I simply don't care but that's not the same as actually feeling sadness about something that has happened for millions of years.
@@biggootz sounds like you had a great life! I’m just saying it hurts to see this. If I could of gotten to that little bird I would have saved it! Lol That’s just me being female I guess. We are natural nurturers. At least I am. It’s built in me to defend the innocent. I couldn’t have witnessed death like that it would hurt me. Even though I eat meat and know what happens to it. I guess out of site out of mind on the meat part…lol I don’t know, the older I get the more tender hearted I become. 🥹🦄
@@biggootz Your initial observation that people who commented seemed unfamiliar with nature and that this is common among birds is badly served by your analogy. A farmer or rancher who raises animals to kill and eat them is not nature, is it. And when hunters kill rabbits, squirrels and deer, do they poke them repeatedly with a knife until they finally die or do they aim to kill with one shot? The killing of a chick for survival may be natural but it is sad nonetheless and often seems cruel because (of the ones I've seen) it is rarely a swift and painless death. This chick took a long time to die.
When it becomes a full grown Eagle, then what? Keep it in a cage for the rest of its life? The parents teach it how to hunt, kill… survival skills. You gonna grow a set of wings and teach it survival strategies? This is nature. Not all that hatch, are going to survive. That’s just one common known fact of any wild animal. These birds HAVE TO BE in top physical and mental health for survival reasons. A weak bird or a dumb one, does not survive. Mother Nature has been doing her job for millions upon millions of years. She knows what she’s doing. The strong survive, the weak will not. When choosing to watch these live cams, YOU take on the responsibility of knowing that what you’re going to see is not always going to be favorable. Nature isn’t a Disney movie, princess. It’s brutal and harsh. You’re watching an aggressive species. Aggression in these nests should be expected and not a surprise. . . Especially when there’s a food shortage. If it’s too much, there are hummingbird live cams here on TH-cam. Perhaps that would be more your speed.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml They have already raised 2 brothers in captivity. It can be done. There is a video, it’s the 2 in NZ after they had to euthanize the dad that was injured and they didn’t know there were two eaglets. The mother stops feeding if the dad doesn’t return. Also, you’re being rude calling her a princess. Life is short, be kind.
@@kristenevans4557 Do you have reading comprehension issues? Perhaps you should read this chicks comment a bit slower. I NEVER stated “it couldn’t be done,” now did I?! Rescues/professionals do rehabilitation and releases, yes. However, an average person isn’t going to know how to train an Eagle to survive on it’s own. Getting all emotional because nature takes its course, is a bit ludicrous. Who asked for your 2 cents anyway, cupcake? Don’t like my comment? Don’t read it. It really is THAT simple. 😘 Nobody made you God nor TH-cam police so just move on along. You’re dismissed.
Oh how it breaks my heart to see this Eaglet suffer. I wish there was no such thing as Abel and Cain syndrome in birds of prey. It’s heartbreaking to watch, Mother Nature can be just as heartbreaking as it is beautiful. Fly high little Eagle as you Rest In Peace 💔💖
It's not heartbreaking. The strongest survive so that future generations will be even stronger. You want the weak ones to pass their genes on so they spawn weaker and weaker birds, thereby making it easier for their species to go extinct? THAT's how "nature" survives.
It happens in raptors usually even with enough food. In parrots, on the contrary it has been observed that the older chick shares some of its food with the younger.
@@opt4heavenhearts4thehomele27 usually solitary species will be more likely to inflict intraspecies violence. in flock birds (like many parrots) there is already a communal nature, so less need for this level of competition between individuals.
is it a common thing in bird? Is it only under the condition of not having enough food or they do it anyway? I saw some owl videos the stronger baby will help the other baby to eat.
Survival of the strongest. This is why animals have survived and adapted for so long. Removing weak bloodline and keep the strong ones. It's nature and it's natural.
@@eireannsimpson2753 Weak chick, born late, sick chick, deform chick... doesn't matter. Pick your choice. Animals will always have survival instinct. Removing the weakess link is a survival trait so the rest can survive. Don't be so triggered... it is only natural.
A parent came and saw the attack but did not intervene. I follow several bald eagle nests and only seen one dad that sort of intervene to stop the attack. In majority of nests bonkings or attacks only happen when there’s food.
El mas grande se quiso ensañar con los 2, pero prefirió al más pequeño. Ese pequeño pudo vivir, veo sus movimientos antes del ataque y si tenía posibilidad de desarrollarse, lástima que aquí el tamaño fue un factor importante.
@@choonjalee1200 That's what all pray babies do, kill the smaller ones. The small baby would have done the same if it was bigger. The parents won't do anything because they would have to damage the big chick to save a small chick, that doesn't make any sense. So they do nothing.
I can buy the idea of the stronger bird surviving and strengthening the gene pool but it seems that's it's often the youngest that is killed ,not necessarily the weakest?
It’s too bad that eagles eggs are laid so many days apart. That’s a lot of growth between the first hatched and the last. This inevitably creates the situation of having one larger and thus more dominant sibling.
Probably wouldn't be an issue if food was plentiful. Essentially having multiple tricks is redundancy in case one of them dies At least it's not like the shoebill stork. It has two babies and then will only feed the one that wins the fight.
@@michaelcorcoran8768 Good points. It’s a stark reminder of how pleasant and beautiful nature can outwardly appear, even harmonious, but the majority (even the powerful and majestic Bald Eagles) are in a constant and often cruel battle for survival. And the fittest they must be.
Why I don’t watch 3 eaglet nests, specially this nest, seems to be particularly brutal, yes it’s nature, but sometimes I’m human, and get emotional. Circle of life can be brutal
@Catania Momma Italia a rare 4 eagles nest is out there and I’m just dreading the outcome. Oldest chick is bigger than the others and every day getting the lion’s share of the food. It won’t end well.
@@southerngal4655 I’ve been watching (more closely) the 1 eaglet nest and it’s just wonderful to see the parents almost doting on their chick. He’s well fed and loved, almost cherished. Not what you see in 2,3 or the 4 eaglet nests.
The other sibling was just as big as the one that killed the smaller chick so it should be fine. The chick went after the small one because, well, it reduced competition.
Let there be a food shortage and I guarantee, you’ll still watch a young one starve. Yes, birds of prey will get food defensive if there’s not enough food being brought.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml its not the food bro. Many bird species are like that. It is an evolutionary thing. Eagles, seagulls are two examples. But there are many. Siblicide is common in birds in general. Its like lion infanticide, completely normal. Without the infanticide lions can't mate. That's just how the evolution worked out.
@@kwakuba9167 Birds of Prey ARE sensitive to food fluctuations. If there’s not enough food being brought to the nest, the strongest Bird of Prey WILL act accordingly to reserve their right to (hopefully) survive. This has NOTHING to do with “evolution” but how these animals are instinctually driven for survival. There was a brief food shortage with this nest… hence the severe aggression. Do some research. Thanks in advance, “bro.” 👍🏾
@@Butterfly-mt5ml Siblicide is normal among many birds of prey. Normal behavior not because of food. And all species today do what they do as a result of their evolutionary history. You are the one that's need to do research not me.
@@kwakuba9167 🤦🏾♀️” Bro,” do you understand what evolution is? 🤣 These BIRDS haven’t evolved at all. EVERY animal has instincts for survival. Evolution had no part in how these birds survive. Their INSTINCTS been this same way for as long as they’ve existed and adapted. Do you understand what “instincts” mean? So again, it’s comical that you think I care to hear about what you *think* you know, “bro” but I’m truly not interested nor do I care to hear about your complete idiocy, “bro!” Now “bro,” take a hint and move on! You’re acting a bit creepy, “bro!”
I've seen aggressiveness, but this was the worst I ever seen. We had chickens growing up, & I know it nature of the animals, the weakest ones always get picked on. So sad☹️😢Poor baby. Took such a beating.
I’v seen worse! Did you see blood here? I’v seen one chopping the other ones head off! So please, it’s nature, stop being so dramatic and u folks can also stop watching sucha vids if u don Have the nerves. THAT HELPS A LOT! 🤷♂️
It amazes me to no end how helpless and vulnerable they are when they are young. They are nothing more than large lumps of flesh and feathers. And their beaks you can’t miss the mouth!
Jeez, watching this made me want to grab that older one and throw it against a wall. Almost reminds me of the torment I got from my older brother growing up.
@Saroj Bantawa You are what's wrong with society. Get ahold of your emotions you fucKin wuss how dare you say to kill eaglets if there's more then 1 I hope they do that to your kids
These cams are not in place for rescue mission purposes. They’re in place to give us a rare opportunity to take a peek into THEIR world. When watching these live cams, YOU take on the responsibility of knowing that what you’re going to see is not always going to be favorable. That’s just a common fact of nature. If you can’t mentally handle it, don’t watch it. Not all that hatch, are going to survive. ALL birds of prey are aggressive when it comes to food and/or the lack thereof. This behavior should be expected and not surprising to see in these nests. The strong/smart survive. The weak will not. Again, another simple fact of nature. These are instinctual creatures and will behave as such. Obviously this eldests instincts are telling it to eliminate the smallest Eaglet for whatever instinctual reasons. This. Is. How. Birds. Of. Prey. Are. Besides all of that common knowledge, theres clearly a typed out warning in this videos title on what this video is about. Yet, here y’all are still crying about it… smh..
Lol try that attitude in any public space buddy and a group of people will beat your ass. You’re smart enough not to be a fucking asshole, so act like it.
@Luminary Harris Exactly, the truth is that humanity is too successful for it's own good and the more we advance and the more our populations grow the more we self destruct. We live in our own self constructed worlds separated from nature and so natural selection and population control no longer applies to us. We are defying nature quite literally.
@ Jesus. A similar scenario may be happening at the Pittsburgh Hays nest. I have seen the oldest eaglet peck the two younger ones at times and there isn't even any food in the nest. 😔
Most eagles,especially the bigger chic will always abuse and kill the smaller chic in the nest, it is very hard to watch if such a nest is wach by a camera, but it is the hard reality of nature, it is brutal
@Amber Cheng,what in heck is going on where there are two grown birds& seem to only give attention to two larger chick than smaller when feeding?. One of large birds does the feeding& the second just watches,ha?.
This was sooo sad to watch and I started to watch this nest occasionally to see if the other eaglet would be ok. If you watch the other eaglet is in a submissive stance most of the time because it knows the sibling is being killed. The bigger one then tried to kill the surviving eaglet and wouldn't let it eat...thankfully it survived and had to learn to feed itself. I didn't think the second eaglet was going to survive, but thank God it did and had developed great survival skills! 🙏👍🦅
Y llegan las s padres y sin comids, se iran a comer algun polluelo? Los dejan solos mucho tiempo, y de noche, que tristeza para estos animalitos, los mas chicos picados por el mas grande, 😮
@@verabolton Right. Sadly, some people can’t understand that and call these birds of prey “mean” or my favorite, a “bully.” There is no “love loss” between siblings and it’s basically, every Eaglet for themself. The strong survive, the weak will not. That’s a very common known fact of all wildlife.
People forget, birds are dinosaurs with feathers. They are not going to use the same survival strategies that higher order mammals might. And even those mammals can be cruel by (most) human standards. If they aren’t killing off weak siblings, something else would have spied on the little one and tried to eat it, or the other 2 would eat more and the little one would die from being malnourished. Nature is wondrous and magical and at the same time very brutal and cruel.
This is not uncommon in any bird species. Unfortunately it happens with all kinds of birds. Even pet parakeets. My guess is lack of food and there's always siblings who compete for food. This is nature's way. Strongest surive to carry on the genes. If food isn't plentiful for the parents to feed some times they kill their young. This is how nature continues. There was a warning on the video before you watched it. Realize if bother most people to see this but it's how it works.
Probably born first and has gotten the most food. At the feedings you’ll see they bully the other ones into submission thus getting to eat the most. So the large one keeps getting bigger faster than the other ones. Food was getting scarce in this nest so the bigger one eliminated competition.
@@erismana2105 they can't they need permission to go near that nest and since it's nature they won't get that permission only if it's from something done by a humans like Fish line poison from something they ate or a fish hook
@@jackhoward8 No there can be 3 watch Decorah eagles live stream that mom raised 40 eagles and 3 at a time but there was never a problem with Food the live by a fish hatchery when there's a poor food supply this is the end result And yes there was bonking and aggression on that nest also
@Catania Momma Italia I've watched eagle nest 10 yrs seen the worst of the worst seen babies die from poison,seen them die because black flies suffocated them seen live Ducks and Ducklings and birds brought to nest and eaten alive when the food Source is low watched babies kill their siblings so I've seen it all I'm not in denial if cameras aren't there it happens we just don't see it
"Gloria Mokoena" It is sad but it happens in nature all the time. We must not take it out of context. Parent animals will care for the strongest and allow the weakest to die or allow the stronger siblings to overtake the weaker one so that the parent can care for the one most likely to survive. It is not pretty. However if an animal is weak or sick it is for the better that he dies so as not to prolong suffering.
Probably isn't enough food to feed all three of them. This is staggeringly common among animals and birds especially. Sometimes the parents kill the kids sometimes it's the siblings. Sometimes they just stop feeding it. One of the reason they have multiple chicks like this is because it's sort of a redundancy so the odds of at least one of them surviving go up. There's any consolation, the little guy's existence might have helped serve his biological duty which is to make it so the species continues to go on and on and on. No life is really wasted in the animal kingdom. Thing died but the food that would have gone in his mouth might make the difference between survival for the others. And it's not like his sibling has any idea of the morality. Attacking on instinct because it's hungry
It's not stubborn it's just following its instinct too maximize its chances for survival. I understand it's hard not to judge from our perspective but I guess you watch enough of these birds nest over time you just have to start thinking about it differently.
Not sure why someone couldn’t step in and save the 2 that were being attacked. I mean other nests are being carefully monitored and if they have eye infection etc they are taken for a week and then put back.
Because these live cams are not for rescue mission purposes. They’re there to give us a rare peek into THEIR world. When watching these live cams, YOU take on and accept the responsibility of knowing what you’re going to see, isn’t always going to be favorable. The reality of nature isn’t a Disney movie, cupcake. The strong survive. The weak will not. This fact helps weed out weak genes and helps the species from going extinct. If you mentally can’t handle their reality, why watch?
This is such a heartbreaking 💔 😢 thing for us humans to process. That's a good thing. Our hearts 💕 are in the right place. We are viewing the animal kingdom, where survival of the fittest governs. The littlest eaglet was not born that far apart from the other two, but, is so much smaller. Could it not fight for its share of food or was it suffering with some disease or disorder? We will never know. 😿 People have the ability to care for each other when we are sick, injured, aged, born with disabling conditions, hungry, tired, freezing, the list goes on. Animals cannot do that, to the same extent. If they are not strong and healthy, they won't last very long in the wild. 50-70% of eaglets die in their first year of life. A very sad statistic.😿 Also, keep in mind that at least one of the parents is perched nearby, guarding their nest, and, they don't stop the attack. We all love ❤️ our pets and the animals around us. Trust that they have the instinct to preserve their species. Be blessed! 😻
I find it fascinating that we watch with tender hearts to see this happening in the animal kingdom and me included root for the hapless animal/bird who's lot in life is to be at the bottom of the pecking order. Yet our own species annihilates adults and children etc. in senseless wars every year including right now that has nothing to do with a survival of the fittest regime that is designed to help with lack of abundance of natural food for many species. I think being human we just seem to blank out the horror of human suffering that is abundant and common in our own species. Especially if our lives are comfortable. We are removed from it then. Doing my best to be a realist I find this an odd phenomenon.
@@affordabledesertliving3487 I could not agree with you more, when it comes to a human's ability to accept the human sufferings in the world, and, even contribute to them, through things like wars, while, at the same time being overly sensitive to the fate of the smallest animal, who, as you have stated, has its purpose in life, which we humans find disturbing. What's even more baffling to me is that people can easily get caught up backing an idea to alleviate one type of human suffering or disadvantage, by calling attention to an individual area of human suffering or disadvantage, and even propose a solution or plan to help one cause which will result in the harm of, or infringement upon, another individual's right to exist or their freedoms. People can be very selfish when they think their cause warrants demanding that society change to accommodate, fix, alleviate, or take into consideration their plight, even when the solution to their problem will result in the harm or infringement of humans in the process. Only their happiness matters to them. And, because people need people in many ways, we easily jump on the bandwagon, carrying our signs and flags in protest of something, and develop tunnel vision for the cause, which, if accepted by those in power to change in the way demanded, will hurt someone else. We have become a live and who cares how you live society. Because we are aware of our own inadequacies and trespasses, IMHO, we process those feelings by being sympathetic to the plight of a small vulnerable creature and pat ourselves on the back for being loving and sensitive to the point of tears. 😭 It's somewhat crazy, but, it goes on every second of every day. Fascinating!
There is definitely pure hunger here!! Even the middle chick is "nibbling" on its living sibling out of desperation! 😨🤔 RIP poor little baby, it's finally over now.. fly free.. 🌈😢🐣🦅💚
We had House Wren Birds nesting and breeding in a flowerpot in the wardrobe. This is now the 2nd brood in a year. Luckily the young animals are very safe!
That’s just nature. The parent most likely did the same thing, as the surviving chick (usually 3 chicks in one nest) kills it’s siblings for food and attention from the parent, so the parent wouldn’t care as eagles want only the strongest chicks.
Можно было забрать пттенцов ,это снято установленнои видеокамерои, и выкормить их вневоле ,а потом отпусть в дикую пророду , спсти их от старшего птенца!!!
I saw it life. It was so sad. Dont know the ownerd dont help him and took then out. .....so sad the second bird was always be the baby. He has this sad feeling too
"Cathey Bergman" The "bully" just has a strong sense of survival. The smaller weaker one would eventually die. Nature is filled with these scenarios. The birds who grow to maturity will do things like invade other birds' nests and eat their young.
A nasty bully? Putting human emotions on natural bird instincts is just ridiculous. Would you rather have it'd be like the storks and have the Mama stork throw the weakest, youngest one out of the nest to the ground? Would that suit you?
This has always been the way since the beginning. Not just this one mother eagle. Always the way so only the strongest survive and continue strong genes. All eagles had to do this if they had siblings.
Very sad and heartbreaking video to watch all this.Why non of the parents were there to take care of the babies? Usually one parent stays with the babies. RIP sweet soul.
So sad. Poor thing. RIP sweet eagle. No more pain.
😥💔
It's still suffering in hell!!!!!!
Weird how mom and pop protect the babies from predators but not from their siblings.
Its ok, you dont understand the real world. Maybe just shut up and keep your stupid opinions to yourself. Thanks!
Natural selection
In the world of nature the strongest survive and the weak die.
It's sad but that's the way of nature.
That's why the runt of any animal rather it be a wolf, lion, or bird usually die.
If the older chick didn't kill the younger one the younger one would've died of starvation and malnutrition because the two older chicks would've taken all the food from the runt.
Excellent point! This is heartbreaking z😢
I thought the same thing
It looked to me in the beginning of the video, the infant was just trying to stay warm and cuddled up to its siblings. The oldest had no mercy on either of its fellow nestlers and nature took its course sadly! 😢😭
It's not an infant it's a runt. The one that doesn't get fed so it doesn't grow.
eventually the bigger one will most likely kill the second one too.
@@adotintheshark4848They only kill eachother when the parents doesn't feed them enough
@@stellviahohenheim in times of plenty, usually. But most often there isn't enough food to feed all the little ones, and one ends up eating more and getting bigger than the others.
nature can be cruel
The hardest part for me is that the poor little thing suffered.
Lol
ikr. gets me so fking hard
his only crime was being born late by a week.....
@@michaelvoorhees5978 🤡
it made me cry cause at the end when the parents come back to feed he can hear his siblings chirping and he moves his legs but he’s helpless
The sad part of watching wild nests. Heartbreaking for us humans, but what drives these raptors is the survival instinct. Mother nature is seldom a fairy tale.
This is worst I have seen since I have been watching nests. I'm sure it happens all the time but it was just so brutal and 💔.
@@southerngal4655 Well, despite knowing a bit about eagles, I must confess I could not bring myself to watch the whole video. And all for the lack of food. I wonder whether humans would behave any better, in a crisis!
@@Luceforall I did not watch the whole video either. Unfortunately you are probably right about us humans. I would hate to have to find out.
What happened to the mom or dad? No parents in the house to feed these kids so they ended up killing each other? What's the story? 😪
@@AiJaiDeeSaMer Hi. I haven't followed this nest, personally, but I believe there was no regular food supply for two days, which caused the aggression. After that, food supplies became more regular.
The little baby bird was not culled because he was weak, but simply because he was born later and was naturally smaller, which is why he was abused and killed. If he had not been killed, it is quite possible that he would have grown up to be a stronger and smarter eagle than his older brother.
Stop taking Acid
Yes it was. It was born late because it was weak and took longer to develop........ you're so wrong. Think a little, it's fairly easy.
@@michaelvoorhees5978 By the way, Mike Tyson has an older brother.
@@michaelvoorhees5978 Eagles don't lay/incubate their eggs all at once. This chick would have been laid last while its siblings got a headstart and hatched first.
@@michaelvoorhees5978 there are many random variables in egg hatching that have nothing to do with genetics. Try to think a little, and stop overusing vowels in your name.
I feel terrible for the baby Eagle getting mangled by it's own sibling, and suffered a horrible death.
It was annoying! It never shut up! Good riddance!
Even tho it was mangled it still tried to cuddle. Poor baby.
Man Eagles just don’t give a F
It was freezing. The chicks also go towards the aggressor to try to hide under them and away from beak and claw. Food scarcity was so extreme that even with a full crop the oldest continued to agress. One of the worst nests recorded.
Poor baby 😂. More like weakling
@@kimloy8019 poor like your mind
Baby eagles are such abastard specially the older 🥲💔
Потому он , орлан , и символ америки, как и кукушка, символ израиля.
This is taking sibling rivalry to a whole new level
O mais velho detona o mais fraquinho
Siblicide is very common in birds of prey.
Adan killed by Cain bible
Your name is important to ME
@@Hankxiong pray for birds of prey and U2
Wow. I saw the warning but wasn't quite prepared for this...gruesome...
When I read the title ,I thought he died of health conditions. Didn't see this coming. So sad.
For those familiar with nature, which seem to be very few from reading these comments, this is very common among numerous types of birds.
Shut up, smarty pants
Thing is, doesn’t matter that it’s nature, it’s still very hurtful as a human to witness it. It’s sad.
@@charlotter8276 I grew up in a farming/ranching family. We had all kinds of livestock and was around all kinds of wild animals. If I truly felt sad for every animal I saw die or killed, I would be in a mental institution by now. Farmers/ranchers eat the pigs, cows, chickens, etc. that they raise and eat rabbits, squirrels, and deer they kill when hunting. Had large vegetable garden and fruit trees. People who get all their food at the grocery store do not understand that way of life and understand very little about nature. Don't think that I simply don't care but that's not the same as actually feeling sadness about something that has happened for millions of years.
@@biggootz sounds like you had a great life! I’m just saying it hurts to see this. If I could of gotten to that little bird I would have saved it! Lol That’s just me being female I guess. We are natural nurturers. At least I am. It’s built in me to defend the innocent. I couldn’t have witnessed death like that it would hurt me. Even though I eat meat and know what happens to it. I guess out of site out of mind on the meat part…lol I don’t know, the older I get the more tender hearted I become. 🥹🦄
@@biggootz Your initial observation that people who commented seemed unfamiliar with nature and that this is common among birds is badly served by your analogy. A farmer or rancher who raises animals to kill and eat them is not nature, is it. And when hunters kill rabbits, squirrels and deer, do they poke them repeatedly with a knife until they finally die or do they aim to kill with one shot? The killing of a chick for survival may be natural but it is sad nonetheless and often seems cruel because (of the ones I've seen) it is rarely a swift and painless death. This chick took a long time to die.
I wish I could've somehow fostered this poor baby. Little one didn't even have a chance. 😭
Nope!
When it becomes a full grown Eagle, then what? Keep it in a cage for the rest of its life? The parents teach it how to hunt, kill… survival skills. You gonna grow a set of wings and teach it survival strategies?
This is nature. Not all that hatch, are going to survive. That’s just one common known fact of any wild animal. These birds HAVE TO BE in top physical and mental health for survival reasons. A weak bird or a dumb one, does not survive. Mother Nature has been doing her job for millions upon millions of years. She knows what she’s doing. The strong survive, the weak will not.
When choosing to watch these live cams, YOU take on the responsibility of knowing that what you’re going to see is not always going to be favorable. Nature isn’t a Disney movie, princess. It’s brutal and harsh. You’re watching an aggressive species. Aggression in these nests should be expected and not a surprise. . . Especially when there’s a food shortage. If it’s too much, there are hummingbird live cams here on TH-cam. Perhaps that would be more your speed.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml They have already raised 2 brothers in captivity. It can be done. There is a video, it’s the 2 in NZ after they had to euthanize the dad that was injured and they didn’t know there were two eaglets. The mother stops feeding if the dad doesn’t return.
Also, you’re being rude calling her a princess. Life is short, be kind.
@@kristenevans4557 Do you have reading comprehension issues? Perhaps you should read this chicks comment a bit slower.
I NEVER stated “it couldn’t be done,” now did I?! Rescues/professionals do rehabilitation and releases, yes. However, an average person isn’t going to know how to train an Eagle to survive on it’s own. Getting all emotional because nature takes its course, is a bit ludicrous.
Who asked for your 2 cents anyway, cupcake? Don’t like my comment? Don’t read it. It really is THAT simple. 😘 Nobody made you God nor TH-cam police so just move on along.
You’re dismissed.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml wow, you must be fun at parties. I understand eagles are wild animals but sometimes a little compassion can go a long way.
Oh how it breaks my heart to see this Eaglet suffer. I wish there was no such thing as Abel and Cain syndrome in birds of prey. It’s heartbreaking to watch, Mother Nature can be just as heartbreaking as it is beautiful. Fly high little Eagle as you Rest In Peace 💔💖
Really 🤣🤣🤣
❤❤q ni
To tu tu u6h
what is the creator name of this channel
It's not heartbreaking. The strongest survive so that future generations will be even stronger. You want the weak ones to pass their genes on so they spawn weaker and weaker birds, thereby making it easier for their species to go extinct? THAT's how "nature" survives.
Abel and cain...you must be reading the Bible often
What a sad slow and painful death it endured
It happens in raptors usually even with enough food. In parrots, on the contrary it has been observed that the older chick shares some of its food with the younger.
exactly some species are extremely kind, parrots esp!
@@opt4heavenhearts4thehomele27 usually solitary species will be more likely to inflict intraspecies violence. in flock birds (like many parrots) there is already a communal nature, so less need for this level of competition between individuals.
@@mirrepoix also the clima and food avaliability play a major role
Well not necessarily. I've seen raptor chicks share food with one another too. This is an unusual situation.
This one is turning it's sibling into the food.
Omg poor baby. I just wanted to go hug him or her. So sad 😞
Only the strong survive. 💪
The lil one is 3 day hatched after biggest one but the size is huge different .
why you didnt rescue that eagle baby???
Such a vicious attack on sweet DH16 She doesn't stop💔💔 Too sad
How much older is the big chick?
Poor Baby Eagle 😭😭😭🙏
is it a common thing in bird? Is it only under the condition of not having enough food or they do it anyway? I saw some owl videos the stronger baby will help the other baby to eat.
Survival of the strongest. This is why animals have survived and adapted for so long. Removing weak bloodline and keep the strong ones. It's nature and it's natural.
It wasnt a weak chick,it was born days later after the bigger one that killed it.
@@eireannsimpson2753 Weak chick, born late, sick chick, deform chick... doesn't matter. Pick your choice. Animals will always have survival instinct. Removing the weakess link is a survival trait so the rest can survive. Don't be so triggered... it is only natural.
@@kongvue5160 🎯👍🏾
A parent came and saw the attack but did not intervene. I follow several bald eagle nests and only seen one dad that sort of intervene to stop the attack. In majority of nests bonkings or attacks only happen when there’s food.
Why are they attacking each other if they are well feed?
The parent won’t intervene. What’s it gonna do? Smack her Eaglets tail feather with her wing? Y’all are ridiculous! 🤣
predator has instinct to kill
El mas grande se quiso ensañar con los 2, pero prefirió al más pequeño. Ese pequeño pudo vivir, veo sus movimientos antes del ataque y si tenía posibilidad de desarrollarse, lástima que aquí el tamaño fue un factor importante.
Es que el más fuerte debe sobrevivir, aquí no hay maldad ni nada parecido
Too bad big baby try to kill smaller baby why Mona bird not stopping ? It’s unfair and cruel to watching
@@choonjalee1200 That's what all pray babies do, kill the smaller ones. The small baby would have done the same if it was bigger. The parents won't do anything because they would have to damage the big chick to save a small chick, that doesn't make any sense. So they do nothing.
I can buy the idea of the stronger bird surviving and strengthening the gene pool but it seems that's it's often the youngest that is killed ,not necessarily the weakest?
That eaglet definitely has screw loose.
It’s too bad that eagles eggs are laid so many days apart. That’s a lot of growth between the first hatched and the last. This inevitably creates the situation of having one larger and thus more dominant sibling.
Probably wouldn't be an issue if food was plentiful. Essentially having multiple tricks is redundancy in case one of them dies
At least it's not like the shoebill stork. It has two babies and then will only feed the one that wins the fight.
@@michaelcorcoran8768 Good points. It’s a stark reminder of how pleasant and beautiful nature can outwardly appear, even harmonious, but the majority (even the powerful and majestic Bald Eagles) are in a constant and often cruel battle for survival. And the fittest they must be.
Why I don’t watch 3 eaglet nests, specially this nest, seems to be particularly brutal, yes it’s nature, but sometimes I’m human, and get emotional. Circle of life can be brutal
@Catania Momma Italia agree, this nest has always been extremely brutal
@@mari1apo2 yes I agree! Even the second eaglet is cowering. As another chatter said in the comments the parents are incompetent!
@Catania Momma Italia a rare 4 eagles nest is out there and I’m just dreading the outcome. Oldest chick is bigger than the others and every day getting the lion’s share of the food. It won’t end well.
@@kristenevans4557 the Hayes nest in Pennsylvania is experiencing this same thing with 3 eaglets to this year.
@@southerngal4655 I’ve been watching (more closely) the 1 eaglet nest and it’s just wonderful to see the parents almost doting on their chick. He’s well fed and loved, almost cherished. Not what you see in 2,3 or the 4 eaglet nests.
I wonder what kind of camera you use for recording. Thanks
This is the way of nature. Nothing we can do about it. The smaller ones were competition for food.
Just heartbreaking.
RIP little angel fly free 😥😥😥🦅🦅
Why did you have to kill the little brother so pathetic?
The middle one gets pecked as well, probably fighting, shouldn't let the big one hurt one side. 😭😭😢😢🥺🥺
@@amazinglovingbeautiful6830 Who are you talking to? 🤣
What was the other one doing to the half dead one?
O que aconteceu nesse ninho?? Porque os pais demoram tanto em alimentar seus filhotes??
Pq ele faz isso com os irmaozinhos? Ta com fome será?
Was she eating the dead one or did she cover it up?
covered it up.
I don’t imagine the other brother lasted much longer, as well.
The other sibling was just as big as the one that killed the smaller chick so it should be fine. The chick went after the small one because, well, it reduced competition.
Ave assasina credo bicho miseravel
why was the older sibling picking on the little one? and what was the final outcome when the parents got back? it was unclear
A nice reminder of how things are
Did she come back with some groceries or not?
Not all raptors are like that. I've observed peregrine falcon chicks cohabit peacefully, snuggling up to each other for warmth.
Let there be a food shortage and I guarantee, you’ll still watch a young one starve. Yes, birds of prey will get food defensive if there’s not enough food being brought.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml its not the food bro. Many bird species are like that. It is an evolutionary thing. Eagles, seagulls are two examples. But there are many. Siblicide is common in birds in general. Its like lion infanticide, completely normal. Without the infanticide lions can't mate. That's just how the evolution worked out.
@@kwakuba9167 Birds of Prey ARE sensitive to food fluctuations. If there’s not enough food being brought to the nest, the strongest Bird of Prey WILL act accordingly to reserve their right to (hopefully) survive. This has NOTHING to do with “evolution” but how these animals are instinctually driven for survival. There was a brief food shortage with this nest… hence the severe aggression.
Do some research.
Thanks in advance, “bro.” 👍🏾
@@Butterfly-mt5ml Siblicide is normal among many birds of prey. Normal behavior not because of food. And all species today do what they do as a result of their evolutionary history. You are the one that's need to do research not me.
@@kwakuba9167 🤦🏾♀️” Bro,” do you understand what evolution is? 🤣 These BIRDS haven’t evolved at all. EVERY animal has instincts for survival. Evolution had no part in how these birds survive. Their INSTINCTS been this same way for as long as they’ve existed and adapted.
Do you understand what “instincts” mean?
So again, it’s comical that you think I care to hear about what you *think* you know, “bro” but I’m truly not interested nor do I care to hear about your complete idiocy, “bro!”
Now “bro,” take a hint and move on!
You’re acting a bit creepy, “bro!”
what makes me mad the most is the fact that that eagle is prob all grown up now and living happily
I've seen aggressiveness, but this was the worst I ever seen. We had chickens growing up, & I know it nature of the animals, the weakest ones always get picked on. So sad☹️😢Poor baby. Took such a beating.
I’v seen worse! Did you see blood here? I’v seen one chopping the other ones head off! So please, it’s nature, stop being so dramatic and u folks can also stop watching sucha vids if u don Have the nerves. THAT HELPS A LOT! 🤷♂️
@@Medoeza Calm yer tits lady….
@@Medoeza and u can keep ur ignorant ass messages to yourself like skip past the comment if u feel the need to run your beak
lolol
You must have not of been watching these live cams long. There’s been a lot more aggression in these nests.
So sad but, it is nature and is called, 'Survival of the fittest. R.I.P little one.
It amazes me to no end how helpless and vulnerable they are when they are young. They are nothing more than large lumps of flesh and feathers. And their beaks you can’t miss the mouth!
I'm so sorry little baby. My heart is broken. I wish I could have saved your life. I'm sorry!
That’s sad. Thanks for showing.
Was family starving at the time?
Jeez, watching this made me want to grab that older one and throw it against a wall. Almost reminds me of the torment I got from my older brother growing up.
seriously. very triggering for the humans
I wanted to throw it in the water!
Wow, human is only and the most cruel animal on this planet
Made me wish for a hungry owl or hawk.
Same here! My older brother was brutal to me as well!
How to get this video
ВСЮ ЖИЗНЬ НЕНАВИЖУ СИЛЬНЫХ И ПОМОГАЮ СЛАБЫМ!!!☝🏼🤲🏼📿
Where is the mother Eagle?
I cried my heart out seeing such brutal behavior on such a baby chick..it just tore me into pieces.
Nancy its shattered my heart 💔
@@serapmehmet3346 Mine too! 😭
I wish they would intervene in these situations. It’s just such a waste of life. Firstborns are such jerks more often than not.
@Saroj Bantawa You are what's wrong with society. Get ahold of your emotions you fucKin wuss how dare you say to kill eaglets if there's more then 1 I hope they do that to your kids
These cams are not in place for rescue mission purposes. They’re in place to give us a rare opportunity to take a peek into THEIR world. When watching these live cams, YOU take on the responsibility of knowing that what you’re going to see is not always going to be favorable. That’s just a common fact of nature. If you can’t mentally handle it, don’t watch it. Not all that hatch, are going to survive. ALL birds of prey are aggressive when it comes to food and/or the lack thereof. This behavior should be expected and not surprising to see in these nests. The strong/smart survive. The weak will not. Again, another simple fact of nature. These are instinctual creatures and will behave as such. Obviously this eldests instincts are telling it to eliminate the smallest Eaglet for whatever instinctual reasons. This. Is. How. Birds. Of. Prey. Are.
Besides all of that common knowledge, theres clearly a typed out warning in this videos title on what this video is about. Yet, here y’all are still crying about it… smh..
Qe filhote malvado até entre os animais tem sempre um querendo ser melhor qe o outro
No such thing as fairness, equality, or safe spaces in this world. Don’t ever forget the world you actually live in
Unlike these birds we can choose not to be savages
ergo anti egalitarian eagle alter egotism birdbrained bro bromide?
Lol try that attitude in any public space buddy and a group of people will beat your ass. You’re smart enough not to be a fucking asshole, so act like it.
It doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. Honestly, it’s the only thing we can control.
@Luminary Harris Exactly, the truth is that humanity is too successful for it's own good and the more we advance and the more our populations grow the more we self destruct. We live in our own self constructed worlds separated from nature and so natural selection and population control no longer applies to us. We are defying nature quite literally.
Why is the one pecking at the smallest?
Not every eaglet attacks smaller siblings beyond meal times. This one is different. It might have been inherited from one of it's parents.
@ Jesus. A similar scenario may be happening at the Pittsburgh Hays nest. I have seen the oldest eaglet peck the two younger ones at times and there isn't even any food in the nest. 😔
@@southerngal4655
🍓 It must be very hard to watch the attacks in real life .
Hahahaha....yeah rigth....
Most eagles,especially the bigger chic will always abuse and kill the smaller chic in the nest, it is very hard to watch if such a nest is wach by a camera, but it is the hard reality of nature, it is brutal
It’s unusual, they usually just take all the food and one might starve
@Amber Cheng,what in heck is going on where there are two grown birds& seem to only give attention to two larger chick than smaller when feeding?. One of large birds does the feeding& the second just watches,ha?.
This was sooo sad to watch and I started to watch this nest occasionally to see if the other eaglet would be ok. If you watch the other eaglet is in a submissive stance most of the time because it knows the sibling is being killed. The bigger one then tried to kill the surviving eaglet and wouldn't let it eat...thankfully it survived and had to learn to feed itself. I didn't think the second eaglet was going to survive, but thank God it did and had developed great survival skills! 🙏👍🦅
Bird does not know his sibling is being killed.
How awful mom let it go on!
@@debgrimes7230 be for real these are animals stop putting human traits in them it’s apart of life
@@alyssaTT456 so it's ok to watch animals killed? It's still a life. You probably believe in abortion,too.
Y llegan las s padres y sin comids, se iran a comer algun polluelo? Los dejan solos mucho tiempo, y de noche, que tristeza para estos animalitos, los mas chicos picados por el mas grande, 😮
Sibling mischief is usually “let’s go soap the neighbors”, not “hey, let’s eat Bobby”.
I guess you failed to notice that these are Eagles and not humans 🤦🏾♀️
@@Butterfly-mt5ml Sadly, this is the life of way too many children...
@@verabolton Right. Sadly, some people can’t understand that and call these birds of prey “mean” or my favorite, a “bully.” There is no “love loss” between siblings and it’s basically, every Eaglet for themself. The strong survive, the weak will not. That’s a very common known fact of all wildlife.
@@Butterfly-mt5ml this comment is a joke???? 🤦♀️
@@camo2156 No pumpkin. It’s a fact.
Are the chicks all the same age? Was the larger “killer” chick born in an earlier group?
The strongest is always the survivor. The worlds way of living since the beginning of time.
Wrong. The strong only survive in nature. In the human world the weakest coward survives because he usually has a gun
@@NetScourge 😂
@I'll_Be_Frank who told you that fairy tale? The white man let me guess.😂😂😂
@I'll_Be_Frank What?! 🤦🏾♀️🤣😂
Humans are NOT the “weakest apes,” you big buffoon! 🤣😂🤡
People forget, birds are dinosaurs with feathers. They are not going to use the same survival strategies that higher order mammals might. And even those mammals can be cruel by (most) human standards. If they aren’t killing off weak siblings, something else would have spied on the little one and tried to eat it, or the other 2 would eat more and the little one would die from being malnourished. Nature is wondrous and magical and at the same time very brutal and cruel.
This is not uncommon in any bird species. Unfortunately it happens with all kinds of birds. Even pet parakeets. My guess is lack of food and there's always siblings who compete for food. This is nature's way. Strongest surive to carry on the genes. If food isn't plentiful for the parents to feed some times they kill their young. This is how nature continues. There was a warning on the video before you watched it. Realize if bother most people to see this but it's how it works.
Cainisim is common in wild raptors when food is in short supply survival of the strongest.
Storks are one of the worst...the parents even throw their little one off the nest...😪
@@De.D1
Your right Storks are the worst, I watched a video and it was terrible to watch throwing the baby off the nest after killing it! 😥
Adottiamo la legge del piú forte, su gli esseri umani, scusate pensandoci esiste già.
@@patriciacourt5946 wow that's really sad. I didn't know storks did that.
Why is one so much larger then the rest ? Doesn’t make sense to me
Probably born first and has gotten the most food. At the feedings you’ll see they bully the other ones into submission thus getting to eat the most. So the large one keeps getting bigger faster than the other ones. Food was getting scarce in this nest so the bigger one eliminated competition.
Nature is cruel if there wasn't a camera it would never be seen Imagine it happens everyday without out cameras to watch
If its seen someone should have intervened
@@erismana2105 they can't they need permission to go near that nest and since it's nature they won't get that permission only if it's from something done by a humans like Fish line poison from something they ate or a fish hook
There can only be one
@@jackhoward8 No there can be 3 watch Decorah eagles live stream that mom raised 40 eagles and 3 at a time but there was never a problem with Food the live by a fish hatchery when there's a poor food supply this is the end result And yes there was bonking and aggression on that nest also
@Catania Momma Italia I've watched eagle nest 10 yrs seen the worst of the worst seen babies die from poison,seen them die because black flies suffocated them seen live Ducks and Ducklings and birds brought to nest and eaten alive when the food Source is low watched babies kill their siblings so I've seen it all I'm not in denial if cameras aren't there it happens we just don't see it
omg where are the parents?
Mother nature can be cruel but she knows what she's doing.
lol...nature is chaos. there is no order or sentience. Just chaos.
Birds are such dead beat parents its astonishing that they are not extinct.
So sad a mother can't stop her stubborn child💔
That mother or father probably did the same to its siblings when it hatched
"Gloria Mokoena" It is sad but it happens in nature all the time. We must not take it out of context. Parent animals will care for the strongest and allow the weakest to die or allow the stronger siblings to overtake the weaker one so that the parent can care for the one most likely to survive. It is not pretty. However if an animal is weak or sick it is for the better that he dies so as not to prolong suffering.
Probably isn't enough food to feed all three of them. This is staggeringly common among animals and birds especially. Sometimes the parents kill the kids sometimes it's the siblings. Sometimes they just stop feeding it.
One of the reason they have multiple chicks like this is because it's sort of a redundancy so the odds of at least one of them surviving go up.
There's any consolation, the little guy's existence might have helped serve his biological duty which is to make it so the species continues to go on and on and on.
No life is really wasted in the animal kingdom. Thing died but the food that would have gone in his mouth might make the difference between survival for the others.
And it's not like his sibling has any idea of the morality. Attacking on instinct because it's hungry
It's not stubborn it's just following its instinct too maximize its chances for survival. I understand it's hard not to judge from our perspective but I guess you watch enough of these birds nest over time you just have to start thinking about it differently.
I can't watch this anymore....too sad.
what a bully killer and the great mon dad just watching
And no human intervention #$^&
That's the way it goes its called survival of the fittest. They're not humans stop crying
@@tonyg-2jz82ya. I sure u are a good parents.just like them LOL.Good job man.
@@張軒榤obviously you aren’t a good parent. It’s nature, grow up and deal with it.
So two got killed?
It’s better to be first. Thanks from St. Paul Minnesota.
What bird is this?
I was fully prepared for the alternative scenario where the parents feed the other growing babies in the nest.
Yes !
Question: why didnt you help and provide food to avoid the massacre? 😢
怎麼心中突然希望有一隻貓頭鷹來把那一隻大的刁走當餐點
I swear I was hoping the same!!
Lllllllllllpllllllllllllll
Pllllllllllllllllllllllllpllllllllll
Llllllllllllllllllllllllllplllllllllllllllplllllllllllllpllllll
Lllllllllllllllllplllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllpllllllllllllllllllllll llllpllllllllllplllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Not sure why someone couldn’t step in and save the 2 that were being attacked. I mean other nests are being carefully monitored and if they have eye infection etc they are taken for a week and then put back.
Because these live cams are not for rescue mission purposes. They’re there to give us a rare peek into THEIR world. When watching these live cams, YOU take on and accept the responsibility of knowing what you’re going to see, isn’t always going to be favorable. The reality of nature isn’t a Disney movie, cupcake. The strong survive. The weak will not. This fact helps weed out weak genes and helps the species from going extinct. If you mentally can’t handle their reality, why watch?
This is such a heartbreaking 💔 😢 thing for us humans to process. That's a good thing. Our hearts 💕 are in the right place.
We are viewing the animal kingdom, where survival of the fittest governs.
The littlest eaglet was not born that far apart from the other two, but, is so much smaller. Could it not fight for its share of food or was it suffering with some disease or disorder? We will never know. 😿
People have the ability to care for each other when we are sick, injured, aged, born with disabling conditions, hungry, tired, freezing, the list goes on.
Animals cannot do that, to the same extent. If they are not strong and healthy, they won't last very long in the wild. 50-70% of eaglets die in their first year of life. A very sad statistic.😿
Also, keep in mind that at least one of the parents is perched nearby, guarding their nest, and, they don't stop the attack.
We all love ❤️ our pets and the animals around us. Trust that they have the instinct to preserve their species.
Be blessed! 😻
I find it fascinating that we watch with tender hearts to see this happening in the animal kingdom and me included root for the hapless animal/bird who's lot in life is to be at the bottom of the pecking order. Yet our own species annihilates adults and children etc. in senseless wars every year including right now that has nothing to do with a survival of the fittest regime that is designed to help with lack of abundance of natural food for many species. I think being human we just seem to blank out the horror of human suffering that is abundant and common in our own species. Especially if our lives are comfortable. We are removed from it then. Doing my best to be a realist I find this an odd phenomenon.
@@affordabledesertliving3487
I could not agree with you more, when it comes to a human's ability to accept the human sufferings in the world, and, even contribute to them, through things like wars, while, at the same time being overly sensitive to the fate of the smallest animal, who, as you have stated, has its purpose in life, which we humans find disturbing.
What's even more baffling to me is that people can easily get caught up backing an idea to alleviate one type of human suffering or disadvantage, by calling attention to an individual area of human suffering or disadvantage, and even propose a solution or plan to help one cause which will result in the harm of, or infringement upon, another individual's right to exist or their freedoms.
People can be very selfish when they think their cause warrants demanding that society change to accommodate, fix, alleviate, or take into consideration their plight, even when the solution to their problem will result in the harm or infringement of humans in the process.
Only their happiness matters to them.
And, because people need people in many ways, we easily jump on the bandwagon, carrying our signs and flags in protest of something, and develop tunnel vision for the cause, which, if accepted by those in power to change in the way demanded, will hurt someone else.
We have become a live and who cares how you live society.
Because we are aware of our own inadequacies and trespasses, IMHO, we process those feelings by being sympathetic to the plight of a small vulnerable creature and pat ourselves on the back for being loving and sensitive to the point of tears. 😭
It's somewhat crazy, but, it goes on every second of every day. Fascinating!
We would eat each other if wouldn’t be enough food.
After the first egg hatched, waiting 3+ weeks for the third, is just too long ... never had a chance!
Thank you for the explanation. Just fyi ... You were using emoji's that were laughing, not crying. I'm thinking you did this in error.
Where is the parent?
There is definitely pure hunger here!! Even the middle chick is "nibbling" on its living sibling out of desperation! 😨🤔
RIP poor little baby, it's finally over now.. fly free.. 🌈😢🐣🦅💚
It’s not flying anywhere, it’s being slowly digested.
@@Astronurd digestion doesn't last forever lol that wasn't the smart comment you thought it was 🤣
We had House Wren Birds nesting and breeding in a flowerpot in the wardrobe. This is now the 2nd brood in a year. Luckily the young animals are very safe!
I guess I should be grateful that my older brother didn't kill me. Came close...almost drowned me...one of the scariest moments of my life.
Wow! Những chú chim thật đáng yêu
Interesting how the parent watched the attack and did absolutely nothing to stop it
They won’t intervene. Survival of the fittest. That’s a very true statement in wildlife.
That’s just nature. The parent most likely did the same thing, as the surviving chick (usually 3 chicks in one nest) kills it’s siblings for food and attention from the parent, so the parent wouldn’t care as eagles want only the strongest chicks.
Crazy how they buried it then pretended like nothing happened. 😕
So nice to see him protecting his brothers ! He’s so brave ! 🤓
He's not protecting that little.
@@melanieroberts9095 "sarcasm"
C'est horrible !
Il est mort ?
@@mariechris938
Oui.
Bullies I guess are in all species of life
Можно было забрать пттенцов ,это снято установленнои видеокамерои, и выкормить их вневоле ,а потом отпусть в дикую пророду , спсти их от старшего птенца!!!
No, leave nature alone.
Какие они с детства хищники
I saw it life. It was so sad. Dont know the ownerd dont help him and took then out. .....so sad the second bird was always be the baby. He has this sad feeling too
Been watching eagle cams a while now and never seen such a nasty bully like this one!! RIP poor little one 😪
"Cathey Bergman" The "bully" just has a strong sense of survival. The smaller weaker one would eventually die. Nature is filled with these scenarios. The birds who grow to maturity will do things like invade other birds' nests and eat their young.
Oh, I've seen many a nasty bully like this one, eagles and osprey
A nasty bully? Putting human emotions on natural bird instincts is just ridiculous. Would you rather have it'd be like the storks and have the Mama stork throw the weakest, youngest one out of the nest to the ground? Would that suit you?
Did the other one survive
What do you think 😂
@@TartBerry1920if I knew the answer I wouldn’t have asked, are you stupid
Mom of the year just looks the other way!
Ghetto eagle
This has always been the way since the beginning. Not just this one mother eagle. Always the way so only the strongest survive and continue strong genes. All eagles had to do this if they had siblings.
So why couldn’t the person who set the camera take the last little chick Andctear it by hand?
Very sad and heartbreaking video to watch all this.Why non of the parents were there to take care of the babies? Usually one parent stays with the babies. RIP sweet soul.
No soul..