A third eaglet has hatched to a pair of doting bald eagle parents named Rosa and Martin in northern Virginia, completing the family of five who are being streamed live on a webcam as the world watches.

The eaglet slowly emerged from its egg early Sunday morning as its mother fed her other two babies, which were born last week on Tuesday and Friday.

“Rosa and Martin are going to have their talons full,” read a Facebook post about the latest hatching. 

The Dulles Greenway Eagle Cam has been rolling as the new family bonds, with viewers tuning in from across the globe.

Here’s what you need to know about the Dulles Greenway eagles: 

Family history

Rosa and Martin are not first-time parents. Last year, the eagle cam captured the birth of their eaglet, named Orion, and his departure from the nest a few months later. 

“We can’t wait to watch this pair raise their young this year,” Michael Myers, executive director of the Loudoun Wildlife Conservancy, said in a news release.

The eagles are named after civil rights leaders Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. Students from Sterling Middle School in Sterling, Virginia, came up with the names and submitted them as part of a contest.

The Dulles Greenway has been monitoring the couple since they arrived to the nest in the fall of 2021. The cameras capturing their daily lives were installed between the 2021 and 2022 nesting seasons, and the couple have developed an online following since.

At any given moment, people all over the world are tuning in to watch the eagles. As the camera livestreamed last week’s two baby bald eagles on Friday, for instance, people were watching from Japan, Australia, Brazil, Russia, Spain, Finland and Canada, among others, said Terry Hoffman, a spokesman for the group running the camera.

A third eaglet emerges from its egg alongside its siblings, which were born five and two days earlier, respectively. The eaglets are the offspring of Rosa and Martin, the bald eagle parents of northern Virginia.

He said the eagles’ followers have been overjoyed at the latest news, especially coming off of last year’s loss of one egg.

“When we woke up and Rosa moved off the nest and we saw two little bobbleheads, we were just overjoyed,” Hoffman said after the second hatching Friday. “They were flopping and dropping and bouncing into each other. We call them little bobbleheads.”