| Look, A Baby Bird -- Now What? 1. If the bird is uninjured
and has some feathers, put it in the nearest tree.
The parents have no sense of smell and will not know it's
been touched.
If it can't perch and has fallen out of the nest, put it up
in the tree in a berry basket or shoebox lined in shredded tissue. Parents WILL feed it
after people leave.
2. If the bird runs around, is
chick-like (covered with short fuzzy down), it may be a baby quail or killdeer. These
birds nest on the ground, and the parents fly off when people come near.
Leave the immediate area and watch to see if a parent will
come back (you may have to wait up to an hour.)
3. The bird needs help and should be
picked up if: the parents are dead; the bird is newly hatched and the nest and nest mates
are out of reach; the bird fell from a palm tree; it has an injury, a cat or a child has
brought it in from places unknown.
4. If the bird is injured, or has no
feathers, it is most important to get it warm. Use a heating pad on low or a light source
(low wattage.) Fractures need to be set within 48 hours or they heal incorrectly and get
infected.
5. Raising an orphaned songbird
takes from four to eight weeks and a lot of daytime commitment. They need feeding about
every 45 minutes from 6 AM to 8 P.M. for four to six weeks. No trips to the beach wile
you're a bird mother!
When they become self feeding (which may not be until six
weeks old), they need to be exposed to their natural foods (grains, etc. for seed eaters,
mealworms, fruit and berries for the insect and fruit eaters).
After being completely self feeding for one week, they need
two weeks in an outdoor aviary to fly and compete with others.
6. Hummingbirds, pigeons, doves,
hawks, owls, killdeer and quail need special formulas or feeding techniques. Try and get
these birds to us as soon as possible.
Note: hummingbird babies fed sugar water of
"hummingbird nectar" and hawks/owls fed hamburger, etc. for more than 24 hours
may develop crippling deformities.
Related:
What to do if you find a baby Songbird
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Wildbird Sponsor receives:
Certificate of Sponsorship
- Photograph
- Background Information
- General Information on the Species
- One year subscription to Project Wildlife's Newsletter
Education animal visit and talk to the Sponsor's chosen group
Wild birds available for sponsorship
| $100 |
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Great Horned Owl
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P.O. Box 80696
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NOTE A rehab animal can be sponsored based
on availability. However, an education animal
of the same species (when available) or similar species would be the animal used for the
talk & display.
For more information on sponsorships, call
the project wildlife business office at (858) 866-0555.
return to Wildlife Facts |