The Mercury News

Search, rescue, triage for the other wildfire victims

Network of experts provides innovative veterinary care for rescue and rehabilita­tion

- By Tess Joosse

As a raging wildfire scorched Shasta County in late September, a 500-pound black bear stumbled out of the ash. The bear’s paw pads were so burned that he could barely walk when state wildlife biologists found him and rushed him to a treatment center.

Confronted by a surge in the number of hot and fast-moving fires, UC Davis’ School of Veterinary Medicine joined forces with the state Department of Fish and Wildlife to create a network of experts to rescue and rehabilita­te bears, mountain lions and other burned animals.

The efforts of the Wildlife Disaster Network, launched in October, represent a new strategy for veterinary medicine. The network is modeled after a successful UC Davis program that rescues and treats oiled birds and other wildlife in the wake of oil spills.

Volunteeri­ng their time, the veterinari­ans in the new network are performing search-and-rescue operations and triage, in addition to providing innovative veterinary care for wildlife injured in California’s devastatin­g wildfires.

“When we saw an injured animal in the past, the philosophy was, ‘Just let it be. It’s nature’s way,’ ” said Dr. Jamie Peyton, a senior veterinari­an at UC Davis who is an expert in treating wounded wildlife. “Well, a lot of these fires are not natural. And we have a responsibi­lity to not let these animals suffer.”

A series of record-breaking fire seasons has added urgency to the vets’ mission.

In 2008, the Department of Fish and Wildlife took in just one burned animal: a bear that department employees nicknamed Smokey. After he was treated and released, the wildlife agency didn’t see another burned animal until 2017, when they treated two bears and a cougar. But in the three years since then, the agency’s caseload of burned animals has exploded.

“Every once in a while we had a bad year in California, and maybe a bear like little Smokey would come through. But now, almost every year is a really bad year,” said Dr. Deana Clifford, a veterinari­an with the Department of Fish and Wildlife. In 2020, the network has treated burned mountain lions, bears, bobcats, coyotes, foxes and even a possum.

Most wild animals have evolved to survive wildfires, which have always been a part of California’s natural history, injecting the soil with nutrients and clearing debris from the forest floor. But in recent decades, forest management strategies have relied on suppressin­g fires. And that often allows dry vegetation to pile up and provide the fuel that creates more intense blazes.

At the same time, climate change has spurred higher temperatur­es, lower humidity and a diminishin­g snowpack — turning California into a tinderbox, scientists say.

Wild animals have strong fight-or-flight instincts, veterinari­ans say, but today’s hotter and bigger fires are hard to escape.

“They can’t get out fast enough,” Peyton said. “Or they get stuck in a spot and get scared.”

Vets say the chaos of firefighti­ng — bulldozers, trucks, crews and helicopter­s — often frightens animals as they try to find the fire’s edge.

“We’ve had examples where animals ran out of the fire and then actually

ran back in because they saw people,” Peyton said.

Even if animals hide until f lames are gone, the smoldering ground that remains can badly burn their feet when they begin walking around again.

During the peak of fire season in September, Wildlife Disaster Network teams executed several reconnaiss­ance missions into areas they suspected burned animals might be. But as the fire season began to wind down, the network relied heavily on tips to its hotline.

Even though the fire season is mostly over, burned animals are still out there, Peyton said. “They have such a strong survival instinct,” she said. “You can find these animals for months after a fire.”

After they are rescued, most animals are tranquiliz­ed

and transporte­d to the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s investigat­ions laboratory in Rancho Cordova for treatment.

Not all animals can be saved. This year the team had to euthanize several animals whose injuries were so severe they would not be able to survive in the wild again after rehabilita­tion.

Clifford said the vets’ goal is to keep the animals as wild as possible.

It’s not always feasible, however. Three mountain lion cubs were plucked in early October from Shasta County’s Zogg Fire and brought to the Oakland Zoo, where veterinari­ans and the zoo staff treated the cubs’ wounds, gave them antibiotic­s and fed them by hand.

Early this month, the cubs were flown to their

new home at the Columbus Zoo in Ohio. If they were returned to the wilderness, they wouldn’t have had a healthy fear of humans, veterinari­ans say.

“It’s not safe for us or for them,” Peyton said.

But adult animals have a fighting chance to recover and be released to the wild, thanks to innovation­s in veterinary burn care, many of them spearheade­d by Peyton.

A bandage made of thick fish skin is central to her care regimen. The skin is removed from a tilapia, then sanitized in Peyton’s lab and placed directly on top of an animal’s raw injuries.

The fish skin works by protecting the delicate nerve endings of an open burn. It also quickens the wound healing process, likely by providing collagen, a protein that provides a matrix that skin cells can grab onto as they grow.

Peyton read about similar bandages used on human patients in Brazil and thought the technique made sense for wildlife. Unlike a synthetic bandage, a curious bear or puma won’t be hurt by pulling the fish skin off its paw and eating it.

Other treatments include infrared laser therapy to promote healing. Peyton has even administer­ed acupunctur­e and chiropract­ic adjustment­s to a burned mountain lion to relieve stiffness from crawling on its elbows and knees.

After five weeks of treatment, the 500-pound black bear’s burned paws were almost completely healed. So on Nov. 7, after a 240mile drive north and one final examinatio­n, he was released into Whiskeytow­n National Recreation Area in Shasta County. Biologists tagged his ears and put a satellite collar around his neck so they can track his progress in the months and years to come.

As the state’s fire seasons worsen, Clifford said, the recovered animals can become a symbol of resilience in an era when so many California towns and neighborho­ods have been ravaged by wildfires.

“These animals are a piece of these communitie­s,” she said. “You know, we can’t save them all, but I do think that some of these animals bring hope to the communitie­s.”

 ?? KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE ?? Dr. Jamie Peyton, center, from the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, does an initial assessment of a female mountain lion at the Wildlife Investigat­ions Laboratory in Rancho Cordova on Sept. 23.
KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE Dr. Jamie Peyton, center, from the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, does an initial assessment of a female mountain lion at the Wildlife Investigat­ions Laboratory in Rancho Cordova on Sept. 23.
 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? A singed fox moves through a picnic area in the Little Basin Campground in Big Basin State Park on Aug. 26, a victim of the CZU Complex Fire near Boulder Creek.
KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES A singed fox moves through a picnic area in the Little Basin Campground in Big Basin State Park on Aug. 26, a victim of the CZU Complex Fire near Boulder Creek.
 ?? KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE ?? California Department of Fish and Wildlife veterinari­an Dr. Emma Lantz sutures sterilized tilapia skins onto a bear’s paw pads.
KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE California Department of Fish and Wildlife veterinari­an Dr. Emma Lantz sutures sterilized tilapia skins onto a bear’s paw pads.
 ?? KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE ?? A black bear is weighed prior to assessment of his injuries on Sept. 21 at the Wildlife Investigat­ions Lab in Rancho Cordova.
KIRSTEN MACINTYRE — CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE A black bear is weighed prior to assessment of his injuries on Sept. 21 at the Wildlife Investigat­ions Lab in Rancho Cordova.

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