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Bird disease 2021: New Jersey deaths remain mystery

Bird disease 2021: New Jersey deaths remain mystery
thedailyjournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thedailyjournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Bird disease 2021: New Jersey deaths remain mystery

Bird disease 2021: New Jersey deaths remain mystery
burlingtoncountytimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from burlingtoncountytimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Mystery illness killing birds in NJ: Here s what you should do

Where is this happening? Dr. Nicole Lewis, the Division of Fish and Wildlife s veterinarian, said this morbidity and mortality event began in Washington, D.C., the disease s apparent epicenter, in mid-May with more than 100 cases reported. Since then, cases have been reported in Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Indiana, Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. About 20 cases have been reported in the Garden State in the past couple of weeks, she said. But she is expecting these numbers to increase. What are the symptoms? They are sick and dying. We re seeing a lot of eye swelling with crusty discharge and some neurological signs. Some have both, some have one or the other  and these birds are usually succumbing to the disease, Lewis said.

It s baby wildlife season in NJ: Don t move or touch them!

Late spring and early summer in New Jersey is known as baby season. The New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife wants to remind residents that if find a fawn, baby rabbit, fox, bird, raccoon or any other animal just hanging out in your backyard in one spot, don t move it. Often, the lives of many young animals are disrupted by well-intentioned people attempting to save their lives. But you could be doing them more harm than good. Carole Stanko, Wildlife Management Bureau chief at Division of Fish and Wildlife, said the babies are designed to keep still in one spot so as not to attract predators. Many people misinterpret their stillness as either being sick or injured when that is often not the case.

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