网爆门

Remembering SU-Sue and Otto, 网爆门鈥檚 Resident Hawk Pair

red-tailed hawks SU-Sue and Otto in their nest on campusSadly, 网爆门’s resident red-tailed hawks, SU-Sue and Otto, have died. As a species that mate for life, SU-Sue and Otto called campus home since 2012. While their year-round hunting territory also covered the adjacent campus of SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, the nearby Oakwood and Morningside cemeteries, Thornden Park and neighborhoods close to the University, it was on the 网爆门 campus where they built their nest each spring and raised their young.

This is a tragic loss for the pair’s admirers on campus, in the local community and around the world who have followed them and their 28 progeny since they began nesting at 网爆门, via the since 2016, via the since 2017, and on the Facebook pages Syracuse Hawk Chatters and .

The 网爆门 red-tailed hawk nest cam was funded through a generous donation from alumna Anne Marie Higgins in loving memory of her husband, the Honorable Thomas W. Higgins, Jr., who died in 2009 after a brief battle with leukemia. Anne Marie and Thomas (aka “Tim”) were avid bird watchers, and hawks were their favorite raptors.

Perhaps fitting for two hawks that spent most of their lives together, SU-Sue and Otto passed away within a week of one another. On Friday, Jan. 13, around 5 p.m., SU-Sue was found on the ground near Huntington Beard Crouse Hall. She received emergency treatment for symptoms of head trauma but unfortunately did not survive. When a hawk dies, its mate typically finds a new companion, and Higgins thought this might be the case for Otto. But on Jan. 19, she received a report that another deceased hawk was discovered in Oakwood Cemetery. She arrived and confirmed it was Otto.

Higgins transported SU-Sue and Otto鈥檚 bodies to Cornell University Veterinary Medicine鈥檚 Animal Health Diagnostic Center in Ithaca, NY, for necropsy and testing. While some results are pending, preliminary results were聽confirmed by the National Veterinary聽Services Laboratory that SU-Sue and Otto were positive for Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza. While Higgins says we will never know exactly how SU-Sue and Otto acquired their infections, they either ingested infected prey or came into contact with the mucous, saliva, or feces of infected birds or mammals. Any additional information from the pending results will be updated when available.

Since 2017, viewers worldwide have tuned into the 24/7 live feed of SU-Sue and Otto鈥檚 nest cam hosted on the College of Arts and Sciences鈥 website. The feed has given people a 鈥渂ird鈥檚 eye view鈥 of the hawk family鈥檚 adventures, from building each year鈥檚 nest to raising the hatchlings until they fledged (when juvenile hawks鈥 wing feathers are developed enough for flight).

It’s uncertain at this time whether any of their numerous offspring or other raptors will choose to nest on the 网爆门 campus, but SU-Sue and Otto will always be remembered for bringing the joy of discovery to those witnessing the lives of a real hawk family through the nest cam. For updates or to share your own personal stories about SU-Sue and Otto, .