East Bay Times

Wounds on brown pelicans in California raise fears of cruelty

- By Concepción de León

The first bird appeared in September 2019.

A brown pelican arrived at Internatio­nal Bird Rescue in the San Pedro section of Los Angeles with severe injuries: straight slashes on both sides of its pouch that continued to the back of its head, leaving the bird’s neck exposed.

Since then, four more brown pelicans with similar injuries have been treated by the organizati­on, said Rebecca Duerr, its director of research and veterinary science, and the injuries “have been progressiv­ely more horrible.”

“With each bird, it seems more and more likely that this was not possibly something naturally occurring,” Duerr said. “I can imagine a lot of bad things happening, but I can’t imagine any way that this would happen without somebody doing it on purpose.”

Because brown pelicans, which are abundant on California beaches, plungedive for food from 50 feet above the water, the most common injuries come from fish hooks or boat propellers, which leave irregular jagged cuts. But “even if you plunge- dove on a straight-up machete,” Duerr said, “it wouldn’t cause this kind of damage.”

Since the first injured pelican appeared in 2019, others have appeared with similar injuries about once a quarter, in April, June, September and, most recently, on Dec. 15. Three of the birds were found in or near Marina del Rey, and the other two in Ventura Harbor.

The recovery process for the birds takes two to three months, Duerr said, adding that it seemed as if just when one had recovered, another was brought in. Three of the birds were released back into the wild, while one other — the one captured on Dec. 15 — was euthanized and one died of a fungal infection.

The similarity between the injuries, as well as the seemingly precise cuts, have led Internatio­nal Bird Rescue to believe that it may be a case of animal cruelty, Duerr said.

“Pelicans are thought of by some people as being pests,” Duerr said, rather than a “wonderful wild animal,” because they gravitate toward food and often land on boats while trying to catch the same fish as the fishermen. “Some people see wild animals that eat the same fish that people eat as stealing the person’s fish, when people have a choice over what to eat, and pelicans don’t.”

The use of DDT, the first modern synthetic insecticid­e, from the 1940s through the 1960s to combat mosquitoes that carried malaria and typhus, wreaked havoc on population­s of brown pelicans and other birds in the Channel Islands off California, even after the chemical was banned in the 1970s. The contaminat­ion caused the birds’ eggshells to thin and break when they tried to brood them.

Brown pelicans were on the federal endangered species list until 2009, and even after that, they experience­d breeding failures caused by a decreased food supply, Duerr said.

The brown pelican remains a “fully protected bird,” said Capt. Patrick Foy of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s law enforcemen­t division, and harming them violates both California and federal laws.

“You can’t harm pelicans,” he said. “You can’t catch them. You can’t hunt them. You can’t shoot them. You can’t do things like this.”

The agency is taking the allegation­s seriously, he added, but has not yet started a formal investigat­ion because of a lack of leads.

“We’ve got to have some more pieces to put together before we can call it an investigat­ion,” Foy said. “If we have any reports of this kind of activity, we’re going to absolutely take it seriously, but we just have nothing to start with.”

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