A bald eagle flies over Dog Beach (the Malibu Beach Wildlife Management Area) across Great Egg Harbor Inlet from Ocean City on Oct. 26. Photo credit: Daniel Maimone
Daniel Maimone — the Ocean City man who passed along some
spectacular shots of a humpback whale (or two) surfacing off the beach in southern Ocean City last month — shared some of his most recent images.
Longport can be seen in the background as a bald eagle flies over Dog Beach on Oct. 26. Photo credit: Daniel Maimone
Maimone captured photographs of a bald eagle perching and in flight at Malibu Beach Wildlife Management Area (what most folks know as "Dog Beach") near the foot of the Ocean City-Longport toll bridge.
"I've been seeing them in both the north end and south end," Maimone said. "But these pics were taken at the bottom of the Longport Bridge on Oct. 26. I was just lucky to have a bright overcast sky ... and a good camera."
"After so many years of decline, it's great to see the eagle population rebounding."
New Jersey had just one nesting pair of eagles in 1973 (in a remote forest in Cumberland County) when the Endangered and Nongame Species Conservation Act was passed, according to the state Division of Fish and Wildlife. Last year, there were 146 nesting pairs counted within the state's borders.
The highest concentration remains near the Delaware Bay counties of Cumberland and Salem. But bald eagles nest at several different places in Atlantic and Cape May counties.
A bald eagle perches near the foot of the Ocean City-Longport Bridge. Photo credit: Daniel Maimone