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Laura Rotunno

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Laura Rotunno poses with a British mail bag and an image of her newest book

Red-throated Caracara perched in tree

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"Finding a Caracara nest had been on my bucket list of things to do for almost 20 years," says Mark Bonta, a Penn State Altoona researcher, who is working with locals in Olancho, Honduras, to understand more about a recently discovered Caracara nest.

habitat of the red-throated caracara

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Mark Bonta and his team needed local connections to find the Red-throated Caracara nest because the search area in Honduras is large -- about the size of the nation of El Salvador, or the size of several counties in Pennsylvania -- and thickly forested.

Elvin Munguia

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Elvin Manguia, one of the team members who helped locate the nest of Caracaras, leans against an oak tree during the search. The Peregrine Fund sponsored the search.

red-throated caracara perched in tree

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Mark Bonta, assistant professor of earth science, Penn State Altoona, said that the discovery of the Red-throated Caracara is one step in his 20-year journey to help solve "one of the enduring mysteries" of the bird's rapid population decline in the region.

red-throated caracara perched in tree

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The Red-throated Caracara mysteriously disappeared from most of Central America and Mexico about 30 years ago. A team led by a Penn State Altoona researcher recently discovered a nest of the rare raptor.

Red-throated Caracara perched in tree

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Penn State Altoona researcher Mark Bonta said the team that discovered the Red-throated Caracara in Honduras to "community conservation" -- a philosophy that stresses grassroots activism and connections with local residents and leaders.