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Osprey
The Osprey is a large, long-winged bird that is dark brown above and white
below with a white head and a prominent dark eye stripe. The male Osprey is
usually all white below whereas the female has a necklace of dark streaking.
The wing has a distinctive bend at the "wrist" and from a distance
can resemble a gull. A loud, musical chirping characterizes the voice of the
Osprey.
Ospreys breed from Alaska, north-central Canada and Newfoundland south to
Arizona; they winter in North America north to the Gulf Coast and California.
They inhabit lakes, rivers and seacoasts. They in all areas of the Upper Peninsula.
The Osprey searches for fish by flying and hovering over the water; when prey
is sighted the Osprey dives, its talons outspread and splashes into the water.
The nest is a bulky mass of sticks and debris placed in a tree, on a telephone
pole, on rocks or on the ground; 2-4 white, pink or buff eggs splotched with
brown are laid there. Due to the use of pesticides, Ospreys declined drastically
in the 1950's and 1960's, but since then they have slowly made a comeback.