Haast’s eagle was the largest eagle known to have existed, with an estimated weight of 15 kilograms. Its massive size is explained as an evolutionary response to the size of its prey, the flightless moa. The species became extinct around 1400, after the moa were hunted to extinction by the first Māori.
About Haast’s eagle in brief

6 m, possibly up to 3 m in a few cases. Short wings may have aided Haast’s eagles when hunting in the dense scrubland and forests of New Zealand. Some living eagles permit direct comparison with the harpy eagle, and the Steller’s sea eagle are the most powerful and powerful eagles in the world. In comparison, the largest beaks of eagles today reach a little more than 7cm out of a top length of 14 cm ; the longest tarsal measurements out of the top of the eagle’s tarsus are around 11cm out. A lower mandible from the lower mandibles measured 11 cm and the tarsi measured 4 cm out from the top of the eagle in several cases. The top of its eagle’s top mandible measured 11.5 cm out of a total length of 22 to 24 cm.
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This page is based on the article Haast’s eagle published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 03, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






