Wyoming wool growers lost $700,000 worth of lambs to golden eagles in 2025 alone — and the eagle population faces mounting pressure of its own. Two real sides of one conflict, and the outdated rule that blocks a practical, non-lethal fix.
This is a story about two truths sitting on opposite sides of the same fence.
On one side: western ranchers losing real animals and real money to a federally protected predator, with no fast legal path to relief. On the other: a golden eagle population that is roughly stable range-wide but under mounting human-caused pressure, with documented local declines that raise serious questions about how much more it can absorb.
Both sides are right. Both sides deserve better than what the current system delivers. And the clearest path forward isn't choosing between them — it's fixing the outdated rule caught in the middle.
According to Wyoming wool growers, golden eagles killed approximately $700,000 worth of lambs across the state in 2025 alone. In some operations this isn't a one-off — it's chronic, year after year, concentrated during the spring lambing window when young lambs are most vulnerable.
Lambs under 30 days old are the primary target. They're small, slow to escape, and often born on open range without protection — and an eagle kills and feeds on a lamb where it falls rather than carrying it off. A confirmed eagle kill is documented by USDA Wildlife Services through distinctive talon punctures, feeding patterns, and surrounding "whitewash" droppings — but most attacks happen unobserved, and many losses go unreported.
For affected ranchers the legal pathway is unforgiving. Carcasses cannot be moved. Eagles cannot be removed, hazed, or relocated without federal authorization. The USDA FSA Livestock Indemnity Program pays 75% of fair market value — but only if a Notice of Loss is filed within 30 calendar days, and only if USDA Wildlife Services confirms eagle predation in a field investigation.
Wyoming is not a typical state for golden eagles. It holds roughly one quarter of the western U.S. breeding population. It also serves as a corridor for up to 43% of the golden eagles that migrate through the Rocky Mountain Front each fall (Bedrosian et al., 2018). The Wyoming Basin's open sage country, ridge lines, and prairie dog colonies make it some of the densest documented golden eagle nesting habitat in North America — with 804 known breeding territories.
That density comes with responsibility. Here's what Wyoming carries — and what its eagles are up against:
Range-wide the population is roughly stable, but the pressures on it are real and additive. Wind turbine mortality has more than doubled since 2013. Lead poisoning suppresses growth by an estimated 0.8% per year. Illegal shooting and power-line electrocution are the two largest human-caused causes of golden eagle death.
Both things can be true at the same time: a protected population with little room for added pressure can still cause severe local losses to a vulnerable industry. The science doesn't ask us to pick a side. It asks us to find a smarter response.
🎬 Watch: "Wild West — Golden Eagle: Hunter of Ultimate Speed and Strength" (Claw Wildlife). A nature documentary on the golden eagle in the western United States — the predator at the center of this conflict.
There is a practical, lower-cost, lower-controversy tool already in front of us: master-class falconers. A handful of highly trained falconers across the country are federally permitted to capture problem golden eagles from depredating sites, train them, and deploy them in falconry — permanently removing the depredating bird from sheep country without killing it.
It is one of the most surgical, non-lethal solutions available. It is also capped at six birds per year — nationwide. Not six per state. Not six per region. Six total across the entire United States.
The math is stark. Wyoming alone reported an estimated 3,400+ eagle-caused sheep kills in 2024. The national falconry take cap is six eagles per year — total, across every state. Even if every single one of those six birds were sourced from the worst depredating operations in the country — which they are not — the program would barely scratch the surface of the documented conflict.
This is the most fixable piece of the conflict. It doesn't require new field staff, new funding, or years of additional study. It requires a single regulatory update grounded in current population science — exactly the kind of work the Department of the Interior is positioned to do.
This story starts in Wyoming because the state's loss data is unusually detailed — but the conflict reaches far past the state line. Golden eagle depredation on sheep is a documented problem across the western range, and falconers across the country are ready to help wherever the federal system gives them permission to operate.
A practical, science-based take program would allow trained falconers to respond on-the-ground in any of these states:
Every one of these states has documented sheep ranching operations, documented golden eagle activity, and confirmed depredation incidents on file. Many already have licensed master-class falconers living locally — qualified, equipped, and willing to assist neighboring ranchers under federal supervision.
The bottleneck isn't capacity. It isn't expertise. It isn't willingness. It's a single federal cap, written in 2009, that doesn't recognize the geographic reality of the problem.
The story of golden eagle depredation in the American West, in 2026, is not a story of bad people. It is a story of a system that does not match its own stated goals.
The federal government protects golden eagles — and it should. Eagles are part of the western landscape, part of the migratory backbone of North America, and part of cultural and ecological systems that western ranchers themselves have stewarded for generations.
The federal government also stands behind western producers — at least in stated policy. Western ranching communities have asked for years for that policy to translate into faster relief on the ground.
What sits between the policy and the producer is a stack of failures the public rarely sees:
This page exists because the people closest to this conflict — the ranchers losing lambs, the falconers ready to help, the biologists tracking the pressures on the population — deserve to see the full picture clearly. Not the version where one side wins. The version where the system itself is the obstacle.
The lambs are still falling. The pressure on the eagles keeps building. And the people in the middle are still waiting for someone, somewhere, to update a rule that was set fifteen years ago for reasons no one will defend on the record today.
Every loss you log, every report you file, and every voice you add helps make the case for a smarter system. These are the tools we built for that purpose:
This page is part of Eagle Exchange Hub's mission: independent, science-grounded, rancher-respectful reporting on the working reality of golden eagle conflict in the American West. We hold government to its commitments. We hold science to its data. We hold the system accountable for the gap in between.