Search results for "300-815 Testfagen 🤪 300-815 Simulationsfragen 🔆 300-815 Prüfungsunterlagen ⏹ Öffnen Sie die Website ⏩ www.itzert.com ⏪ Suchen Sie ▛ 300-815 ▟ Kostenloser Download 🦔300-815 Übungsmaterialien"

Results 21 - 30 of 164 Page 3 of 17
Sorted by: Relevance | Sort by: Date Results per-page: 10 | 20 | 50 | All

The Babies Have Landed!

[…]their eyes yet. Their mother was hit and killed by a car in Garberville, several of her babies died in the collision and three more succumbed to related injuries. Right now the three little survivors are doing very well. It will take at least 8 weeks before they are old enough to be on their own. Opossums, unlike many mammals their size, have a very short life span, averaging only 1.5 to 2 years in the wild. In another sad and frustrating case, Friday night we received a call from a veterinary clinic in Eureka. Someone had just accidentally taken […]

Legislation that Will Impact Wild Animals

[…]people, each poses a real and significant hazard. As has been said many times, feral cats do not die of old age. Feral and free-roaming cats die suffering deaths caused by infection, parasites, traumatic injury and more. We advocate strongly that responsible pet ownership includes keeping cats contained, safe from highways, abuse, feline disease, and spread of other diseases such as rabies and toxoplasmosis, a significant threat to public health for which cats are the primary host. The needs of wild animals, the needs of homeless or stray cats, and public safety must come before well-intended mistakes. AB 2343, as […]

Preparing for wild babies…

[…]and feed herself. And yes, she has a pouch full of very young babies. As it happens we’ve just completed a new addition to our facility, an improved opossum house (we call it the Opossumary). Designed by staff and built by our dedicated volunteers (many of whom are college students learning to use power tools for the first time!) our new housing for opossums will be sent on its maiden voyage with this young mother and her babies at the helm. While this opossum family was relatively lucky, many are not. The number one mammal that we treat at our […]

Release the Mallards!

[…]are many obstacles between the nest and the water. Along the way sometimes a few ducklings might become separated from the family group – by cats, dogs, kids, streets and roads and more. And that’s where we come in. At Humboldt Wildlife Care Center we have an aviary built especially to take care of pond-loving birds like Mallards. While in care we provide them with all the duckweed they can eat. These ducklings get their first taste of freedom since they hatched over 6 weeks ago! The three ducklings we released last Wednesday were brought in over 6 weeks ago. […]

Horned Grebe Click Bait!

[…]Evolved to a life of diving in pursuit of fish, their legs are positioned far back on their bodies. Walking for these birds is nearly impossible. They also need a fair amount of open water to get into the air. In this vulnerable state, it was fortunate s/he was found by a kind-hearted person rather than a dog, or some other animal known to harm to wildlife… After two weeks in care, the grebe was ready to get back in the ocean. Lucinda Adamson and a couple of our beloved volunteers, Matt and Jeannie Gunn, took him to the Samoa […]

Spring, Renewal and being an Ally to Birds

[…]the grebe’s water ballet, the Red-winged blackbird at the top of the tree trilling for company – all around us these birds begin the season’s work of bringing their babies into the world. Renewal and rebirth – the spark of life is passed on. A nest of House finches brought to our clinic, Spring 2013 (photo: mmerrick/BAX) Right in our own backyards nest sites are selected. Close to shopping! Close to schools! Babies must be fed, after all, and adolescent birds get only a short apprenticeship before they must shift for themselves. Once the eggs are laid parent birds are […]

Rare Opportunity (and the only option we have to continue our work)

[…]of the idea of Bird Ally X knew about it – BAX was an idea whose time was about to come but hadn’t quite. But it did come. On September 22, 2009, Bird Ally X was founded as a collective by six of us. Shannon RIggs, DVM (currently the Director of Anaimal Care at Pacific Wildlife Care in Morro Bay), Vann Masvidal (currently the Center Director also at PWC in Morro Bay) January Bill and Marie Travers (both currently leading our Botulism Response Program in the Lower Klamath Wildlife Refuge), and Laura (currently BAX art director as well as a […]
Read more » Rare Opportunity (and the only option we have to continue our work)

Red-tailed Hawk Released in Redway

[…]of the most heartbreaking conditions. Life-threatening or fatal internal injuries take time to become apparent. After a week in care what had been healthy skin starts dying and sloughing off, toes suddenly turn black. Everything goes wrong and the patient dies. In the case of this Red-tailed hawk, the wounds on his feet were probably where the current had entered his body when he perched on a transmission line near the freeway. The wound at his chest marked the current’s exit. While these wounds were ugly, ultimately they were limited to skin and other soft tissue that healed quickly. Within […]

Wilson’s Snipe Treated and Released

Wilson’s Snipe, a widespread and common member of the Sandpiper family (Scolopacidae), can be found along stream beds, marshy edges, meadows, bogs, and other open grassy habitats – in other words, coastal Humboldt County is a terrific place for birds such as these. 31 January, we received an injured Wilson’s Snipe brought in by a resident of Humboldt Hill, just south of Eureka. From the mouth of the Elk River in Humboldt Bay, up through the river’s valley, excellent snipe habitat is easy to find. Unfortunately so is US101. Numerous other roads, plate glass windows, grassy fields divided into backyards […]

Attention Songbirds: Area to Be Mowed and Cleared

[…]their nests. We extend our appreciation and thanks to Sup. Sundberg for acting quickly to guide community action. The Mad River Union ran a story last week of a plan to “mulch” acreage behind the Safeway in McKinleyville. While the ordinary, quotidian destruction of space that’s been reclaimed by the wild can be distressing, most of us are accustomed to these changes and allow them to pass with little more than a nod, or a passing lament. Before we know it we are parking our cars in what had been a favorite little green space. However, for this particular acreage, […]
Read more » Attention Songbirds: Area to Be Mowed and Cleared