Right now, it is comparatively quiet at IBRRC. So I thought I would post a few stories.
On July 23, 1996, a hatching year Great Blue Heron, tangled in fishing line with fishing hooks embedded in its wing, was captured and brought to the Lindsay Wildlife Museum in Walnut Creek, CA. The bird was stabilized and treated for puncture wounds from hooks and abrasions from entanglement in the fishing line. The next day the bird was brought to the International Bird Rescue Research Center’s aquatic bird rehabilitation facility in Berkeley, CA (we were there before we got our new facility in Fairfield in 2000). The bird was put on a regimen of antibiotics and treated for its wounds. It’s recovery was quick and the bird did well. On July 29, 1996 the bird was banded, number 0977-04747, and released in the Suisun Marsh in Fairfield.
Twelve years later on May 28, 2008, the same Great Blue Heron, now an adult but still wearing band number 0977-04747, was again found entangled in fishing line and fish hooks and was captured at a marina in Oakley, near Concord, CA. The bird was brought to the Lindsay Wildlife Museum which, again, did an excellent job of stabilizing it and removing the fish hooks and line that were tangled around its wing and leg. The bird was then transferred to IBRRC’s new facility in Cordelia, CA. (see attached picture) As before, it was treated for its wounds, held a week or so and on June 5, 2008 it was released healthy and strong back into the Suisun Marsh.
Great Blue Heron in rehab at IBRRC, FairfieldCalifornia has a number of prestigious wildlife rehabilitation organizations that remain open 365 days a year to provide shelter and state of the art care for native wildlife in need of care. The Lindsey Wildlife Museum and IBRRC are two of those organizations and are considered leaders in the unique field of wildlife rehabilitation. Both organizations have worked in tandem for years to support each to provide the best care for local wildlife.
IBRRC specializes in aquatic bird rehabilitation and has specialized facilities to achieve this. The Lindsay Museum cares for many species of native wildlife including raptors, passerines, terrestrial mammals and reptiles. When IBRRC receives an owl or occasional mammal for care, we send them on to the museum for rehabilitation. In turn, they send us the aquatic birds that can benefit from our program and specialized facility. Together we have helped hundreds of animals by cooperating with each other and putting the needs of the animals first.
Great Blue Heron, band number 0977-04747, is a testament to this important relationship and the dedication of these two organizations.
Great Blue Heron released in 2008