 O'Neill here, we're at Georgia Powers Lake O'Coney with Jim Ozier. He's a wildlife biologist and the subject is the bald eagle. First of all, let's begin by asking, why was the bald eagle in trouble 68 years ago? We think primarily from widespread DDT use. So the chemical did a lot of good things on farms and controlling mosquitoes, but it did some harmful things and impacting eagles and other populations of predatory birds. Kept them down. Pushed them way down. Calcium metabolism, the females were laying eggs, essentially had no shells and the reproduction fell off to about nothing. Okay, how about now? Now they're doing much, much better, you know, DDT use was outlawed, we've had a lot of other things happen and the public's more supportive and a lot of better habitat too and we had about 200, over 200 nests last year in Georgia alone. That may be more than you ever had. It very well could be and these inland reservoirs such as Lake O'Coney here providing habitat that didn't exist probably, you know, about 50 years ago. Okay. And so we've always had good habitat on the coast but we're finding more and more habitat inland as these reservoirs have provided that needed foraging and nesting sites. And so that is Georgia Power's role. Right, Georgia Power's played an important role in the recovery of the eagle. These reservoirs again provide a good foraging habitat. The trees around the edges of these reservoirs are providing good nesting habitat and it's really helped to have these populations coming back, you know, many of the nests are actually on Georgia Power lands, others are on different lands, they're also on these same reservoirs. So, you know, we've been good partners in bringing this eagle back. So Georgia Power plays its role as always for wild places and wild things and we all benefit.