An article on TriState rescuing pelicans this week. I'm not sure about this population, but pelicans in previous years have stayed because people were feeding them around local restaurants and marinas. Needless to say, that is strongly discouraged in those locations now. In talking to rehabbers who treated them, they were mostly juvies that didn't know any better. They should have migrated with their parents.
Hopefully everyone here knows that already.
Cold snap endangers pelicans
Rescue center saves birds that didn't migrate due to abundance of food here
By Alex Ruoff
Staff Writer
NEWARK -- Every morning, veterinarian Erica Miller heads to the Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research Center to check on more than a dozen brown pelicans that are suffering from frostbite.
Since New Year's Day, the organization has taken in dozens of birds, most of which were living in southern Maryland when temperatures fell below freezing earlier this month.
According to Miller, about 22 of the 30 birds accepted so far are expected to survive and will be released into the wild once they are rehabilitated.
But with temperatures still hovering around freezing, she fears more birds are at risk for illness or death.
"We heard of two more captured just the other day, and there are more," she said.
David Heilmeier, southern region manager for the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, said the harsh weather caught the migratory birds off guard.
A flock of about 40 was found on Smith's Creek in Ridge, Md., where bait fish -- the birds' main food source -- are still abundant. With the pelicans able to feed, many failed to follow nature's course.
"When they have food, they don't want to migrate out like they should," Heilmeier said. "Then they get hit by the cold and are too weak to leave."
Officials said it's not uncommon for pelicans to suffer from frostbite. In fact, it has been a growing trend for the past several years.
"We didn't get much last year because we didn't have much of a frost," Miller said. "But we've seen this before."
Despite that, the population is thriving, she said.
The birds were first placed on the endangered species list in the 1970s after they came in contact with pesticides that harmed their eggs. They were removed from the list in 1987, and a count conducted by DNR 10 years later showed more than 2,000 pelicans were nesting in the Chesapeake Bay area.
The majority of them migrate south for the winter, but Miller said the flock on Smith's Creek represents an annual effort by Maryland and Delaware agencies to rehabilitate those that stay behind.
Rebecca Elzey, director of development for Tri-State, said about 12 pelicans have made a full recovery, and she hopes all of them will be released when spring arrives. In the meantime, the biggest challenge is funding their care. Tri-State is a nonprofit organization that relies on public volunteers and donations, Elzey said.
"Because pelicans consume copious amounts of herring every day, properly caring for these unique and interesting birds is expected to be very costly," she said.
Heilmeier said his department will continue to monitor the area for more frostbitten pelicans. As for a long-term solution, he fears there may be none.
"We've done a few behavior aversion things, but it doesn't seem to work," he said. "We'll be keeping an eye on them for now."
[email protected] 302-537-1881, ext. 201
Additional Facts
By the numbers
# Thirty-one brown pelicans were moved from Smith Creek in Ridge, Md., to the Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research Center in Newark after suffering from frostbite.
# Twelve birds have fully recovered.
# There are more than 2,000 brown pelicans nesting in the Chesapeake Bay area.
# The birds were placed on the endangered species list in the 1970s, but were removed in 1987.