How to read this map
- 🔴 Red — high incident density (5+ reports)
- 🟠 Orange — medium density (2–4 reports)
- 🟢 Green — lower density or isolated incident
- Confirmed — USDA-verified depredation permit or loss report
- Suspected — Rancher-reported, pending verification
- Historical — Pre-2019 documented records
- Use Seasonal Context to see eagle presence by time of year — Spring (Mar–May) is peak lambing risk
- Use Data Type to isolate confirmed losses vs. all reported incidents
- Click any marker for incident details and source links
🚨 The Spring Lambing Crisis
Problem: March-May is peak lambing season AND when golden eagles return from winter. Lambs age 2-4 weeks are most vulnerable.
Impact: Wyoming lost 3,200+ sheep in 2020 alone. A single Montana ranch lost $48,000 in one season. Eagles (especially juveniles/subadults) kill lambs at sunrise when dispersed from protection.
Why It Matters: Most predation occurs on open-range operations where lambs lack protective cover (brush, woods, sheds). Timing is critical - 76% of eagle-caused losses are 2-4 week old lambs.
Solution: Non-lethal capture and relocation by licensed falconers proven 85% effective at reducing losses. Increasing availability across western states.
This is not hypothetical - verified cases from Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Texas, Utah, Idaho, New Mexico.
🏗️ Golden Eagle Nesting Concentrations
Territory Size: 3-65 sq miles per pair. Spacing: 3.1-8.2 km between nests. Overlaps directly with sheep ranching areas.
🔴 Depredation Zones (Severity)
🔴 Migration Corridors
Primary Corridor: Rocky Mountain Front ecotone (BC/Yukon → Montana → Wyoming). Southern Wyoming hosts the highest intersection of wind development potential and peak eagle migration density (Bedrosian et al. 2018, PLOS ONE).
Eagle Population (Green)
Wyoming: 3,778 pairs (highest). Growing populations = increasing conflicts.
🐑 Sheep Density
Texas: 670K sheep. California: 510K. Colorado: 405K. Open-range operations = highest predation risk.
🏢 Individual Sheep Ranches (200+)
Marker size = flock size. Click for ranch details, location, acres, operation type, and specialist contacts.
💙 Observations (Blue Dashed)
| Layer | Source | Year | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Depredation | USDA APHIS Wildlife Services — Program Data Reports | 2019–2022 | View Reports → |
| Wyoming Survey | Wyoming Public Media — "When Sheep Become An Eagle's Diet" | May 2020 | Read Article → |
| ASI Reports | American Sheep Industry Association — Industry data & policy | Ongoing | sheepusa.org → |
| Migration Corridors | Bedrosian et al. (2018) PLOS ONE — "Migration corridors of adult Golden Eagles originating in NW North America" — 64 adult eagles, 6 study areas (Teton Raptor Center, Raptor View Research Institute, ADF&G), 53 spring + 54 fall routes via dBBMM | 2011–2016 | View Study → |
| Migration Counts | Rocky Mountain Eagle Research Foundation — Annual raptor migration counts, Kananaskis, Alberta | 1992–present | eaglewatch.ca → |
| Eagle Population | USFWS Eagle Population Status & Management | 2016–2024 | fws.gov → |
| ND Nest Data | North Dakota Game & Fish / USFWS Statewide Nest Database (600 known sites; 139 active) | 2014 | ndgf.gov → |
| Sheep Density | USDA NASS — Sheep & Goat Inventory (January 2025) | Jan 2025 | nass.usda.gov → |
| Sightings (eBird) | eBird Status & Trends — Golden Eagle abundance & range models | 2023–2026 | ebird.org → |