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Peregrine Falcon at MSU's Spartan Stadium

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At least three of the four eggs laid by a peregrine falcon in a nesting box at MSU’s Spartan Stadium have now hatched.

Viewers of the MSU Fisheries and Wildlife Club webcam began noticing the first signs of hatching late last week. Now, the parent birds have been seen feeding at least three babies.

Club president Molly Engleman says the chicks are already getting bigger. She says their downy feathers will be replaced by flight feathers in about 40 days, when they should begin to learn to hunt on their own.

“Hopefully, we’ll see them flying from the nest, and the parents will still help them some, feed them some a little bit, but they’ll be pretty self-sufficient by that point.”

Falcons have been seen around Spartan Stadium for about five years. The club erected the nesting box just last year, and the two falcons moved in March. They were once endangered in the U.S. and remain under endangered status in Michigan.

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