Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚥馃嚱 Mexico

The golden eagle - Mexico's national bird

A huge bird of prey with eyes like binoculars and wings as wide as a car

A golden eagle with wings spread wide, gliding against a blue sky

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The golden eagle is Mexico's national bird. It is one of the biggest birds of prey in the world, with a wingspan of over 2 metres - wider than most adults are tall. The golden eagle sits right in the middle of the Mexican flag, holding a snake in its beak while perched on a cactus.

Tell me more

The 'golden' in the name comes from the warm, sunlit patch of feathers on the back of its head. The rest of the bird is mostly dark brown. From below, when it is flying, you can see lighter patches on its wings and tail. It looks huge in the air, with wide flat wings that don't need to flap often.

Golden eagles can see incredibly well. Scientists think their eyesight is about eight times sharper than ours. From hundreds of metres up, they can spot a rabbit moving in long grass. They hunt by gliding for hours on warm rising air, watching the ground far below, and then diving fast to grab their meal in long curved claws called talons.

Their nests are giant. A pair of golden eagles will build a nest of sticks on a cliff or in a tall tree and add to it each year. After many years, the nest can be over 2 metres across and weigh as much as a small car. Eagles often come back to the same nest year after year.

On the Mexican flag, the golden eagle stands for one of the oldest stories of the country. The Aztecs say their wandering people knew where to build their city when they saw an eagle landing on a cactus, holding a snake. That is exactly the picture on Mexico's flag today.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you could see eight times better than you do now, what could you see from your school window?
  2. 02Why might it be useful to come back to the same nest, year after year?
  3. 03Many countries put an animal on their flag. What animal would you choose for your country, and why?
Try this

Classroom activity

Mark out 2.2 metres on the playground with chalk - that's a golden eagle's wingspan. How many children can lie head to toe along it? Compare to one of your classmates with their arms stretched out wide. Whose wingspan is biggest in your class?