Friday, December 10, 2010

COOT! SWANS! and a merganser:)

Above is a red-breasted merganser that was admitted b/c he was stuck in a courtyard. Nothing wrong with him; likely just didn't have enough room to take off. Finders brought him in just in case he was hurt.
Above is an american coot! They are very cool birds--it's hard to see but instead of fully webbed feet, they have sort of scalloped webs on each toe. Since the most common reason for admittance is human-induced injury, this guy was no exception. Some kids had been beating on him when the finders found him. Luckily, some anti inflammatories and rest got this coot back to normal! He'll be released after this cold spell.
We get a lot of trumpeter swans in this time of year. Many of them have lead poisoning from eating tackle that's fallen to the bottom of lakes and ponds. By the time they are weak enough to be caught, they are often too sick to be saved. It happens to other animals as well. Most notably, bald eagles often eat dead deer (ie hunter shot but couldn't track) or deer guts from a kill that have lead shot in it, and end up with lead poisoning. Personally, and granted I'm biased, ALL tackle and shot should be made out of steel or other non-lead metals b/c of the risk to any animal that ingests it.

4 comments:

Unknown said...

A coot! That makes me reminiscent of Dr. Oaks

Unknown said...

I also like that you call the people finders and not rescuers to underscore that the animals don't always need to be rescued.

schottski1 said...

I think it also is a term that allows them less "ownership". People who "rescue" animals and bring them to us seem to think they own the animals--when they don't. So finder is a better term:) do you have a blog joeL

Unknown said...

nope, no blog, just s gmail account, i'm not responsible enough to have one. hence why i'm just now relying to this

i saw your post on fb today, i'm terribly sorry for your loss, i obvi never met molly but sounds like she was a wonderful cat and as i know you well enough i can safely say she had great fortune in becoming part of your family and spent the last years happy and content. I'm again sorry for your loss.