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Helping Wildlife
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Have you ever found a baby bird that had fallen out of the
nest, or an adult bird with a broken wing? Have you seen an
opossum hurt by a car, or a skunk with his face stuck in a jar?
When you run across wildlife in need of assistance, do you know
what to do?
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We should all know that wild animals are
dangerous to approach, and injured wildlife can be especially
aggressive. It's always best to call the experts, and
there are usually organizations and trained volunteers
in every area that respond to calls concerning animals
in distress. I'll list some names and resources of places
you can turn at the end of this article, but first, let's
find out the things we can all do to prevent some of these
tragic incidents from happening in the first place.
Some of the most common injuries are those
caused by humans in one way or another. Entanglement in
trash like six pack rings, cut fishing line and netting
is a big threat to wild animals, most of which could be
avoided with a little effort on our part. Cut six pack
rings so birds and small animals don't get caught in the
rings around their neck or legs. Never cut fishing line
off the rod and leave it in the water or on the ground.
This is one of the most common ways marine animals become
injured, often resulting in death. Large nets out in the
ocean, or small pieces drifting into shore are often the
cause of drowning, as animals get tangled in the net and
cannot escape.
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Wildlife injured on roadways is another
common occurrence. We can help prevent this happening
by slowing down in rural or wilderness areas, turning
on your brights when no oncoming traffic is near and supporting
wildlife corridors, overpasses and under road tunnels
so animals can cross roads more safely.
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| Hitting windows,
power lines, and communications towers is the cause of fatality
to millions of birds each year! You can help to minimize
the chances a bird will become confused by the reflection
in your home, office and school windows. Planting trees
or shrubbery next to windows will usually act to slow a
bird down, reducing chances of fatal injury. Decals may
work for small windows, but you need to cover 80% of the
window space to be really effective. Like it or not, the
best solution to date is to let your windows stay dirty
- they will be less reflective and more likely to be seen
as barriers which cannot be flown through. Now you have
a really good reason not to do windows! Look for opaque
window film as an option in the future, when it hopefully
becomes available to the general public. |
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A great project for home or school is
to build bird-houses - for everything from song birds
to owls. This will give them safe places to avoid predators,
build nests and raise young. Plans for specific species
house sizes can usually be found on the internet, or by
calling conservation organizations like Audubon, or the
World Bird Sanctuary.
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| Believe it or not, one of the
best things we can do to assist animals is nothing! That's
right. If you see wildlife, you should never approach, and
definitely don't feed wild animals - for your safety as
well as the animals. Why? The animal loses its fear of humans,
which can lead to injury or death of both the humans it
encounters and ultimately the animal itself. It may begin
to look towards more populated areas for handouts, and then
is vulnerable to cars, dogs, and even more people. Wild
animals fed regularly, on purpose, or just because pet food
or garbage was left out, may become dependant on that food
source and not look for other natural foods. This is especially
bad for young animals, which may never learn how to find
their proper food sources. Wild animals are often given
foods that can be harmful or even fatal to them as well,
or they may approach someone who does not want it near and
is afraid - most often these animals are killed. Not approaching
or feeding wildlife is one way of doing nothing. Another
way is to never touch injured wildlife - but you should
call the proper people that can help. Local zoos, aquariums,
and animal control offices often know where an injured animal
can be taken for rehabilitation. SeaWorld parks in San Diego,
San Antonio, and Orlando rescue, rehabilitate
and release marine animals under the authority of the
government - in fact, they rescue and release more marine
animals and birds than anyone else in the world! Most cities
have wonderful people who volunteer time and expense to
rescue and rehabilitate local wildlife. Where I live in
San Diego we have two great organizations, Project Wildlife
and Wildlife Assist. Together, these organizations save
thousands of animals each year and are operated totally
on donations and caring volunteers. |
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So remember all the things you can do - like disposing of trash
in receptacles with lids, so animals can't get in them. Support
local and federal legislation preserving wild space for animals
to live, and conserve the resources we need to share with them
like water, trees, and natural lands. Use less pesticides in
your house and yard, and plant native species to provide food
and shelter for local and migratory species of birds, mammals,
insects and reptiles.
People have affected the Earth drastically and forced wild
species to keep up or die. The least we can do is to help those
critters in trouble, and perhaps give them just the fighting
edge they need to survive.
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