By Bonnie Coblentz
MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Good intentioned Mississippians try to rescue
hundreds of baby birds and animals they find each year, but wildlife
experts caution that often these tiny animals do not need help. The first thing
to remember when finding a baby animal or bird is that it is against
state law to keep the animal, even just to save its life. Contact
the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks, the
Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine or a
local, licensed wildlife rehabilitator to rescue the animal. Bronson Strickland,
an Extension wildlife specialist in MSU's
College of Forest Resources, said not only is it illegal to possess
any kind of wildlife, even a lizard, snake, baby rabbit or racoon,
but it's generally not a good idea. “These animals won't make the ideal pet and can carry diseases,” Strickland
said. Fawns are often
mistaken for orphans when their mothers are actually nearby feeding. “A doe will have one or two fawns and bed them down while she goes out
foraging during the day,” Strickland said. “She may be gone half
an hour or so, and will come back to nurse the fawn, but those who happen across
the baby may think it is abandoned.” Strickland said other times someone in the woods or meadow will spook
a mother deer but never see her run off. Later when they come across
the baby, they think it is abandoned. Hunters have been blamed for
making orphans of babies, but Strickland said that rarely happens. “Hunting season in Mississippi doesn't start until most of the
fawns are capable of living on their own,” he said. “Unless you
know for a fact that the mother is dead, do not pick them up or take them away.” He said wildlife
rehabilitators can successfully raise the fawns, but fawns released
into the wild have a very high death rate, with 80 percent to 95
percent not surviving. “Even though you're well-intentioned, you may kill the fawns with
love if you take them away,” Strickland said. “If you aren't
sure if the mother is alive, check back in a few hours. If the fawn has not
moved, call appropriate authorities to report the orphaned animal.” Maggie Horner
is the animal health technician who oversees the Wildlife Support
Group, the in-house wildlife rehabilitation unit in MSU's
veterinary college. Dr. Thomas Lenarduzzi heads this department in
Starkville which helps sick, injured, or abandoned birds and mammals. “We don't accept bats or snakes, and we only take in baby carnivores
that are of nursing age, because if they can eat on their own, they are too
dangerous,” Horner said. “We try to rehabilitate the animals we
take in.” Horner said baby
songbirds and mammals such as rabbits, possums and foxes are brought
in during the spring, while fawns start arriving in late June or
early July. In the winter, the group sees a lot of owls. Many of
the owls and other raptors such as hawks that are brought in are
injured, and veterinary students are able to get experience working
with different species while the animal is getting the life-saving
help it needs. “While much of the success for each animal depends on the extent of their
injuries, the longer we do wildlife rescues, the better our success rate gets,” Horner
said. “We try not to keep the animals long-term, so after surgery and
injury recovery, we turn them over to another facility for long-term rehabilitation.” Horner encouraged
everyone who finds what appears to be an abandoned mammal to try
to reunite it with its mother before assuming it is an orphan. She
urged those who find a baby bird fallen out of the nest to return
it to the nest, as this is the bird's best chance of
survival. “Their mothering instinct overtakes what little bit of smell the babies
may have on them,” Horner said. MSU's Wildlife Support Group can be reached at (662) 325-3432.
The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks can be
reached at (601) 432-2400. -30-
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Call experts to
help save baby animals
Contact: Dr. Bronson Strickland, (662) 325-8141
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Thursday, 26-Mar-09 14:01:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw06/060615.html
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