Breeding Nesting habitat is usually dry, mature woodlands, which they utilize for nesting and seclusion, but nests are most often fairly close to shrubby openings and wetland areas where prey is more likely to be concentrated. A shy species toward man, they normally nest only where human disturbance is quite low. Like most raptors, they are highly territorial and tend to maintain a stable home range. Spanish imperial eagles nest from February to April. The nesting pair will construct a nest of as much as across when first built, which will increase in time, especially in mature cork oaks (
Quercus suber) or pine trees. Clutch size is usually two to three eggs, with an incubation period of about 43 days, but on average about 1.23-1.4 fledglings are produced per nest. Nestling mortality is usually due to human disturbance and destruction and nest collapses, secondarily due to predation and
siblicide. Fledging is reached at 63–77 days of age but juveniles can linger for an extremely long period, to at least 160 days after fledging.
Food and feeding The Spanish imperial eagle feeds mainly on
European rabbits, which comprised about 58% of this species' diet before
myxomatosis and
rabbit haemorrhagic disease greatly reduced the rabbit's native Iberian population. As rabbit population crashed they have been recorded feeding on a wide range of
vertebrates with varied success depending upon prey populations and may become semi-specialized hunters of
water birds especially
Eurasian coots,
ducks and
geese, also taking some numbers of
partridges,
pigeons and
crows and any other bird they happen to encounter that is vulnerable to ambush. More than 60 bird species are known in be included in their prey spectrum. Several mammals may also be taken including various
rodents,
hares,
mustelids,
hedgehogs and even other large predators such as
red foxes or—rarely, since they are not typically present in the eagle's habitat—domestic cats and small dogs. Rarely, reptiles or even fish may also be preyed upon. The largest prey taken by this species may easily exceed , such as foxes,
greylag geese or
white storks, but mean prey mass is relatively low, especially in areas with fewer rabbits. One study reported mean prey mass as locally, though a larger average prey size has also been reported. The Spanish imperial eagle is one of several rabbit-favoring birds of prey in Spain along with the similarly specialized
Iberian lynx. This species is largely segregated by habitat from other eagles that specialize on rabbits here to lessen direct competition, as the imperial eagle favors woods, whereas the golden and Bonelli's eagles tend to dwell in much rockier areas. However, Spanish imperial eagles frequently quarrel over food with various raptors, even much larger
vultures, and the raptors may at times try to kill the young of one another. In one case, in protecting their own nest, an adult Spanish imperial eagle even killed a
cinereous vulture, the largest accipitrid in the world. Healthy, free-flying Spanish imperial eagles are
apex predators, being mostly free of natural predators themselves but they do sometimes kill each other in conflicts and rarely interspecies conflicts may too be fatal. When protected from human persecution and far from threats such as powerlines, adult mortality can be as low as 3–5.4% annually. ==Conservation==