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Post by Runic on May 4, 2014 4:45:12 GMT 5
It does not matter if it was 'injured to a certain extent' no bird is immune to pasteurella and it can be fatal for them Yes a bacterial virus kills the eagle, not the cat lol some win right
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 4:50:09 GMT 5
It was still the cat that infected the eagle so no one won.
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 4:57:28 GMT 5
If "no one won", then I don't understand its use. The female eagle was 14 pounds and the female cat was 7 pounds and yet the eagle still could not kill it without being killed itself.
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Post by Runic on May 4, 2014 5:07:05 GMT 5
It was still the cat that infected the eagle so no one won. Really dude? Really? Infection is not a part of a cats arsenal, they don't bite to infect. A infection may have (nothing says it did) killed the eagle. But the bird won the initial fight unhurt enough to still fly away. Bird 1 Cat 0
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Post by Runic on May 4, 2014 5:09:00 GMT 5
If "no one won", then I don't understand its use. The female eagle was 14 pounds and the female cat was 7 pounds and yet the eagle still could not kill it without being killed itself. I'd love to know when 14lb female eagles were common. As where it states the eagle died. Or the cat only being 7lbs. Sounds like you're looking for anything to make it seem less impressive than it is. The eagle apparently fought and killed the cat then flew off. Get over it.
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:10:40 GMT 5
No bird is immune to that infection. The cat still basically killed the eagle because if it would have never bitten/scratch the eagle the eagle would have still been alive, there I put it in simplest terms for you ok?
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Post by Infinity Blade on May 4, 2014 5:14:05 GMT 5
No one said it was immune to an infection (which may not have even occurred in the first place).
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:17:18 GMT 5
No one said it was immune to an infection (which may not have even occurred in the first place) In the falconry forums I saw members say no bird is immune to it. I have even seen a few sources that claim the same thing.
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:24:43 GMT 5
The female eagle was 14 pounds and the female cat was 7 pounds and yet the eagle still could not kill it without being killed itself. I'd love to know when 14lb female eagles were common. As where it states the eagle died. Or the cat only being 7lbs. Sounds like you're looking for anything to make it seem less impressive than it is. The eagle apparently fought and killed the cat then flew off. Get over it. They refer to the cat as 'her' and female cats avg.6 to 7 pounds the same as male golden eagles like you claimed so there is no way the the eagle is the same size
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Post by Infinity Blade on May 4, 2014 5:26:52 GMT 5
No one said it was immune to an infection (which may not have even occurred in the first place) In the falconry forums I saw members say no bird is immune to it. I have even seen a few sources that claim the same thing. So what you're basically saying is that other people have also claimed that birds are not immune to infection. Yeah, we get it, is there anything new to add?
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Post by Runic on May 4, 2014 5:30:39 GMT 5
I'd love to know when 14lb female eagles were common. As where it states the eagle died. Or the cat only being 7lbs. Sounds like you're looking for anything to make it seem less impressive than it is. The eagle apparently fought and killed the cat then flew off. Get over it. They refer to the cat as 'her' and female cats avg.6 to 7 pounds the same as male golden eagles like you claimed so there is no way the the eagle is the same size There's something called cat BREEDS buddy. Some breeds females weigh 5lbs, other breeds females weigh 14lbs. I don't know what breed you're thinking of but its not universally accepted.
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:32:41 GMT 5
In the falconry forums I saw members say no bird is immune to it. I have even seen a few sources that claim the same thing. So what you're basically saying is that other people have also claimed that birds are not immune to infection. Yeah, we get it, is there anything new to add? Yes, you say the infection may have not taken place in the first place. show me an account of a eagle being imto pasteuella.,mune
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:35:51 GMT 5
*immune to pasteuella*
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 5:37:43 GMT 5
Very few female cat breed weigh anywhere near 10 pounds most of them weigh 7 pounds
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Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
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Post by Weasel on May 4, 2014 6:18:27 GMT 5
The average golden eagle weight is 11 pounds so the cat would have to be a maine coon to make it at parity but I seriously doubt this is a maine coon
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