By Melissa Klein
September 21, 2019 NY Post
(From reports from readers
of HD, this menagerie of animals in city parks is not uncommon across the US.
Especially red-eared sliders.)
It’s an urban jungle out
there.
Park rangers handled 748
sick, misplaced or dead animals spotted in city parks — ranging from 451
raccoons to four coyotes to one Dutch blue love bird, according to city data
from May 2, 2018, to June 12, 2019.
The critters range from the
everyday city pigeons and domestic dogs and cats to an alligator snapping
turtle in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx and a harbor seal found dead on
Staten Island.
Central Park logged the most
wildlife reports, with 274 birds, turtles and raccoons — many of which suffered
from the canine distemper virus that makes them act like zombies.
Across the city, 155
critters were considered healthy, 451 unhealthy or injured and 104 dead on
arrival. Conditions were not known for all.
The urban park rangers
respond to calls from the public, park employees or others who have spotted an
animal that looks sick or out of place. Sometimes the animal has wandered away
by the time they arrive — 232 animal reports were deemed “unfounded,” including
one for a boa constrictor someone claimed to have spotted in Morningside
Park.
The rangers determine if the
animal needs to be rescued or left alone.
“Often we believe the best
thing for the animal is to not interfere, and we generally only escalate to a
rescue if the animal appears injured or sick,” said Meghan Lalor, a Parks
Department spokeswoman.
The city sometimes calls in
wildlife rehabilitators like Long Island-based Bobby Horvath.
“Squirrels, woodchucks,
opossums, even a beaver,” Horvath said. “We’ve had snapping turtles, too.” Some
go to a vet, but Horvarth said he does the long-term care at his home. When
healthy, they are driven back to a city park.
The nonprofit Wild Bird Fund
has also answered the call for injured or abandoned animals, including many
young squirrels, said Rita McMahon, the group’s director
.
“They’re scrambling about
before they’re ready to be on their own,” McMahon said. “They will sometimes
fall. They smash their face … mostly they just get a bloody nose.”
Domestic ducks — likely
discarded pets — usually go to an upstate farm.
“They live in a glorious
barn that’s heated in the winter … It’s a very nice set-up,” McMahon said.
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