Camera snaps attack as golden eagle kills a deer

Pictures from a remote camera in an isolated nature reserve in Russia have revealed an attack by a golden eagle on a young deer. In a sequence from the wild quite probably never before recorded, the bird is seen sinking its talons into the struggling sika deer. The camera is intended to monitor Siberian tigers. The three photos were released by the London Zoological Society. The society’s Linda Kerley said she first realized something was up when she approached the wildlife-monitoring device — also called a camera trap — and found a mangled deer carcass nearby. “Something felt wrong about it,” she said in a statement accompanying the photographs. “There were no large carnivore tracks in the snow, and it looked like the deer had been running and then just stopped and died. “It was only after we got back to camp that I checked the images from the camera and pieced everything together,” she said. “I couldn’t believe what I was seeing.” Golden eagles are large birds. Their wingspan tops more than 6 ½ feet and, while they typically eat small birds, mammals, or snakes, they’ve been known to target larger animals as well. The eagles are trained by Russian hunters who sometimes send them after prey in flocks The zoological society said the photos were shot in the Lazovsky State Nature Reserve in the Primorye region of Russia’s Far East on Dec. 8, 2011. The pictures were released only after the publication of a scholarly article by Kerley and co-author Jonathan Slaght of the Wildlife Conservation Society in the Ohio-based Journal of Raptor Research earlier this month.