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Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stress evaluation in wildlife is valuable tool for rehabilitation and injury prevention. This pilot study investigated categories of stress in rescued birds. We determined three categories of stressors (preliminary, primary and secondary) using clinical data of rescued birds from Ade...

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Autores principales: Janssen, Kimberley, Marsland, Crystal, Barreto, Michelle Orietta, Charalambous, Renae, Narayan, Edward
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7552254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32854307
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10091500
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author Janssen, Kimberley
Marsland, Crystal
Barreto, Michelle Orietta
Charalambous, Renae
Narayan, Edward
author_facet Janssen, Kimberley
Marsland, Crystal
Barreto, Michelle Orietta
Charalambous, Renae
Narayan, Edward
author_sort Janssen, Kimberley
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stress evaluation in wildlife is valuable tool for rehabilitation and injury prevention. This pilot study investigated categories of stress in rescued birds. We determined three categories of stressors (preliminary, primary and secondary) using clinical data of rescued birds from Adelaide, South Australia. It was discovered that birds are highly susceptible to impact injuries (e.g., flying into a building window) and vehicle-related injuries as preliminary stressors, which often result in hospitalisation of birds. Immobility and abnormal behaviour represented the most common primary stressor, while the most common secondary stressors included trauma and fracture. Furthermore, the most common outcome in clinics due to exposure of birds to these three stressor categories was euthanasia. ABSTRACT: Urbanisation exposes avian wildlife to an array of environmental stressors that result in clinical admission and hospitalisation. The aim of this pilot study was to conduct a retrospective analysis of clinical data and characterise this based on categories of stress experienced by avian wildlife patients. The results from this study indicated that impact injuries (n = 33, 25%) and vehicle-related injuries (n = 33, 25%) were the most common occurring preliminary stressors that resulted in the hospitalisation of avian wildlife. The most common outcome of avian patients that suffered from vehicle-related injuries was euthanasia (n = 15, 45%), as was avian patients that suffered from impact injuries (n = 16, 48%). Immobility (n = 105, 61%) and abnormal behaviour (n = 24, 14%) were the most commonly occurring primary stressors of avian patients. Finally, trauma (n = 51, 32%) and fractures (n = 44, 27%) were the most common occurring secondary stressors in avian patients. The most common outcome of all these stressors was euthanasia. This study provided further evidence towards the notion that human- and urbanisation-related stressors are the main causes of hospitalisation of avian wildlife, but also indicated that birds admitted as a result of human-related stressors are more likely to be euthanised than released. This study also provided a categorisation system for the stressors identified in avian wildlife patients (preliminary, primary and secondary) that may be used to monitor the stress categories of wildlife patients and gain a deeper understanding of the complex notion of stress.
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spelling pubmed-75522542020-10-16 Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife Janssen, Kimberley Marsland, Crystal Barreto, Michelle Orietta Charalambous, Renae Narayan, Edward Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stress evaluation in wildlife is valuable tool for rehabilitation and injury prevention. This pilot study investigated categories of stress in rescued birds. We determined three categories of stressors (preliminary, primary and secondary) using clinical data of rescued birds from Adelaide, South Australia. It was discovered that birds are highly susceptible to impact injuries (e.g., flying into a building window) and vehicle-related injuries as preliminary stressors, which often result in hospitalisation of birds. Immobility and abnormal behaviour represented the most common primary stressor, while the most common secondary stressors included trauma and fracture. Furthermore, the most common outcome in clinics due to exposure of birds to these three stressor categories was euthanasia. ABSTRACT: Urbanisation exposes avian wildlife to an array of environmental stressors that result in clinical admission and hospitalisation. The aim of this pilot study was to conduct a retrospective analysis of clinical data and characterise this based on categories of stress experienced by avian wildlife patients. The results from this study indicated that impact injuries (n = 33, 25%) and vehicle-related injuries (n = 33, 25%) were the most common occurring preliminary stressors that resulted in the hospitalisation of avian wildlife. The most common outcome of avian patients that suffered from vehicle-related injuries was euthanasia (n = 15, 45%), as was avian patients that suffered from impact injuries (n = 16, 48%). Immobility (n = 105, 61%) and abnormal behaviour (n = 24, 14%) were the most commonly occurring primary stressors of avian patients. Finally, trauma (n = 51, 32%) and fractures (n = 44, 27%) were the most common occurring secondary stressors in avian patients. The most common outcome of all these stressors was euthanasia. This study provided further evidence towards the notion that human- and urbanisation-related stressors are the main causes of hospitalisation of avian wildlife, but also indicated that birds admitted as a result of human-related stressors are more likely to be euthanised than released. This study also provided a categorisation system for the stressors identified in avian wildlife patients (preliminary, primary and secondary) that may be used to monitor the stress categories of wildlife patients and gain a deeper understanding of the complex notion of stress. MDPI 2020-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7552254/ /pubmed/32854307 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10091500 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Janssen, Kimberley
Marsland, Crystal
Barreto, Michelle Orietta
Charalambous, Renae
Narayan, Edward
Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title_full Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title_fullStr Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title_full_unstemmed Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title_short Identifying the Stressors Impacting Rescued Avian Wildlife
title_sort identifying the stressors impacting rescued avian wildlife
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7552254/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32854307
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10091500
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