Songbirds are mysteriously dying across the eastern U.S. Scientists are scrambling to find out why
Jul. 6, 2021 , 5:00 PM
Jennifer Toussaint, chief of animal control in Arlington, Virginia, can’t forget the four baby blue jays. In late May, worried residents had delivered the fledglings to her clinic just outside of Washington, D.C., within just a few hours. Each was plump, indicating “their parents had done a great job caring for them,” Toussaint says. But the birds were lethargic, unable to keep their balance, and blinded by crusty, oozing patches that had grown over their eyes.
Toussaint and her staff soon reached a gloomy diagnosis: the jays were the latest victims of a mysterious deadly disease that had emerged in their area just a few weeks earlier and had already killed countless wild birds. There was no known treatment, so they euthanized the jays. “It was difficult to feel so helpless,” Toussaint recalls.
What to know about unexplained bird deaths in Kentucky
courier-journal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from courier-journal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
ky.gov - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ky.gov Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Animals discovered at the location also included armadillos and nutria, an invasive species native to South America Author: WLTX Updated: 11:12 PM EDT June 30, 2021
LEE COUNTY, S.C. Two men in South Carolina have been arrested, accused of keeping deer and hundreds of squirrels in a mobile home.
Conservation Officers with the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) served search warrants related to the illegal possession of white-tailed deer at a property in Lee County on Tuesday.
Agents with the Lee County Office of Animal Control were called in to assist with the case when SCDNR Officers found, in addition to several deer, hundreds of squirrels and other animals being kept in what officers say were crowded, inhumane conditions inside a double-wide mobile home on the property.