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Officers rescue sick birds

Larger sea are being taken for treatment. The birds are starving; factors include weather and food sources.

February 18, 2010|By Jonathan Oyama

Animal control officers in Laguna Beach are picking up many sick pelicans up and down the coast.

Laguna Beach officers like Joy Falk have been taking in about one debilitated California brown pelican every other day. They have found other sick birds as well, Falk said.

“We found a cormorant just yesterday and a loon today,” Falk said.

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Falk said the pelicans are often underweight. She determines how malnourished a pelican is by feeling its keel, which is a bone down the middle of its chest.

“There’s usually a lot of muscle around the bone, so if we can feel the bone, then it’s really skinny,” Falk said. “That also means that the pelican is eating its fat reserves around its bone, which means that it isn’t finding enough food in the ocean.”

Since January, more than 100 dehydrated and sick California brown pelicans have been sent to rehabilitation centers such as the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center in Huntington Beach.

“They’re finding them on the beach, on the streets, on the piers, just in places where they’re not normally,” said Terri Oba, a wildlife technician at the care center. “And any time you can walk up to a wild animal and pick it up, there’s something wrong with it. Keep in mind, these guys are coming in starving, debilitated. They’re so debilitated, they’re just so weak that they don’t have the strength to do anything else.”

Department of Fish and Game officers are testing the birds’ feathers to discover what is weakening so many of the pelicans. At the moment, wildlife technicians working at the center are uncertain why so many pelicans are showing up on the coast.

“There are a lot of different theories about the availability of food source, the weather, things like that,” Oba said. “But we really don’t know. There’s probably a lot of different reasons that this has happened, a lot of different sources, probably food or weather related, a lot of different things. But there isn’t just one thing that’s causing it. We don’t exactly know.”

The pelicans sent to the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center come in dehydrated with low body temperature. The workers feed the birds smelt and treating them with heat therapy and hydration.

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