A JetBlue flight was forced to make an emergency landing in New York because of a bird strike on Friday.

JetBlue Flight 671 left from Westchester County Airport in White Plains at 9:05 a.m. and was heading to West Palm Beach, Florida on Friday, however about 25 minutes after taking off, the Airbus A320 collided with a bird, the Federal Aviation Administration said according to the Daily News.

After the bird strike, the pilots declared an emergency and landed at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York on Friday morning. The plane landed safely and no one was injured.

Chris Balduino had tweeted photos of the plane. The photos showed a bird carcass stuck in the nose of the plane. Another image showed a hole that was caused by the impact. Balduino said his parents were on the flight and they had to wait at the airport for a new plane to Florida. They were also given the option to return to Westchester.

The FAA will investigate the bird strike. The agency wouldn't say what type of bird the plane hit.

Birds have been a huge concern around northeast airspace following the Janaury 2009 incident involving the "Miracle on the Hudson." In that incident, a U.S. Airways flight that was heading from LaGuardia to Charlotte, N.C., flew into a flock of geese. The pilot, Sully Sullenberger, was forced to make a miracle emergency landing in the Hudson River. All of the 155 passengers and crew members survived.

Following this incident, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services agency captured and killed hundreds of geese living around the area in 2010. Bird strikes are common in the area.