Chicago Sun-Times

7 YOUNG SEAGULLS SAVED IN CHICAGO RETURN TO THE WILD

- —Robert Sanchez

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Several young seagulls emerge from open crates along the edge of a lake in a forest preserve near Itasca.

But instead of immediatel­y taking flight, they stop and stand by the water.

Their hesitation is understand­able. After all, they’ve had a traumatic start in life.

The birds were among about two dozen injured baby seagulls saved in June from a Chicago street after they apparently were attacked by adult birds.

“When these guys were rescued, they actually came to my house that night,” said Alicia Biewer, a wildlife keeper for Willowbroo­k Wildlife Center, who then brought the injured birds to the Glen Ellyn facility.

“They were in such poor condition, I actually didn’t think a lot of them were going to make it overnight,” Biewer said. “Now to see them released is pretty exciting.”

The seagulls were rescued by the Chicago Bird Collision Monitors, a group committed to the protection of migratory birds through rescue, advocacy and outreach.

On June 17, the organizati­on got a call through its hotline about a large group of dead and dying birds on the 700 block of South Jefferson Street in the South Loop.

“We got somebody over there only to realize that what was on the ground were more than 70 dead and injured young gulls,” said Annette Prince, the group’s director.

At least 40 of the seagulls were dead — killed by falling off a building, being run over by cars or dehydratio­n.

Prince said it was a “distressin­g” and “sobering” sight.

Officials from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service concluded the young birds had been pushed off a rooftop by adult seagulls.

Prince said gulls like to nest on flat roofs. Those that were attacked were part of a colony on a threestory storage facility.

“It seemed it was parents attacking or throwing off birds that were not their own,” Prince said.

It’s unclear what caused the adult birds to become aggressive, but temperatur­es were sweltering that weekend and there were a lot of birds on the rooftop.

“It was just a very bad situation,” Prince said.

Because the birds were so young, they couldn’t fly.

By last week, 15 birds had recovered and been released in forest preserves throughout DuPage.

“I hope they do well,” Prince said. “They’re very fascinatin­g animals that occupy a big part of the Chicago lakefront areas.”

On Wednesday, seven more gulls were released in Songbird Slough Forest Preserve. Despite their initial hesitation, all the birds were soaring in circles around the large lake minutes after being set free.

“It feels good,” Biewer said as she watched the birds in flight. “This is the best part of the job.”

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 ?? BEV HORNE/DAILY HERALD ?? Seagulls treated at the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County’s Willowbroo­k Wildlife Center were released Wednesday at Songbird Slough Forest Preserve near Itasca.
BEV HORNE/DAILY HERALD Seagulls treated at the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County’s Willowbroo­k Wildlife Center were released Wednesday at Songbird Slough Forest Preserve near Itasca.

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