The Steller's Sea Eagle is the heaviest eagle in the world. Their diet consists mainly of fish, such as salmon and trout, but this is not the only thing they eat - they have also been known to eat mammals and birds, both by hunting them and already dead specimens. Steller's Sea Eagle nests are known as aeries.
Examples of same-sex pairs successfully raising young have been documented in at least 20 species, and in a few cases, homosexual couples actually appear to have an advantage over heterosexual ones.¹³
13. In some bird species in which same-sex pairs are unable to obtain fertile eggs on their own (or in which homosexual parenting has yet to be observed in the wild), parenting skills have been demonstrated by supplying homosexual pairs with "foster" eggs or young in captivity. Same-sex pairs of Flamingos, White Storks, Black-headed Gulls, Steller's Sea Eagles, Barn Owls, and Gentoo Penguins, for example, have all successfully hatched such eggs and/or raised foster chicks.
"Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity" - Bruce Bagemihl