Young Wildlife Belong in the Wild

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MONTPELIER, Vt. — Watching wildlife is enjoyable, especially when young animals appear in the spring.  
 
But it is best to keep your distance.  Picking up young wildlife can do more harm than good, according to the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, and it is also against the law.
 
When people see young animals alone, they often mistakenly assume these animals are helpless or lost, in trouble or needing to be rescued.  Bringing young wildlife into a human environment often results in permanent separation from their mothers and a sad ending for the animal.
 
Handling wildlife could also pose a threat to the people involved.  Wild animals can transmit disease and angry wildlife mothers can pose significant dangers. 
 
Fish and Wildlife scientists encourage wildlife watchers to respect the behavior of animals in the spring and early summer, and to resist the urge to assist wildlife in ways that may be harmful.  Here are some helpful tips:
  • Deer and moose nurse their young at different times during the day, and often leave young alone for long periods of time.  These animals are not lost.  Their mother knows where they are and will return.
  • Young birds on the ground may have left their nest, but their parents will still feed them.
  • Young animals such as fox and raccoon will often follow their mother.  The mother of a wildlife youngster is usually nearby but just out of sight to a person happening upon it. 
  • Animals that act sick can carry rabies, parasites or other harmful diseases.  Do not handle them.  Even though they do not show symptoms, healthy-looking raccoons, foxes, skunks, and bats may also be carriers of the deadly rabies virus. 
  • Many wildlife species will not feed or care for their young when people are close by.  Obey signs that restrict access to wildlife nesting areas, including hiking trails that may be temporarily closed. 
  • Keep domestic pets indoors, leashed or fenced in.  Dogs and cats kill many young animals each year. 
  • Avoid projects that remove trees, shrubs and dead snags that contain nests during the spring and summer. 
For information about rabies, call the Vermont Rabies Hotline at 1-800-4RABIES (1-800-472-2437).  
 
For the safety of all wildlife, taking a wild animal into captivity is illegal, even one you suspect is sick, injured or has been abandoned. 

Tags: wild life,   

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We Can be Thankful for Vermont's Wild Turkeys

MONTPELIER, Vt. — One of our native wildlife species historically played an important role on Thanksgiving Day.  
 
North America's native wild turkeys were the ancestors of the Thanksgiving turkey on our dinner table. 
 
Originally found only in the wild, turkeys now exist as meat-producing domesticated varieties -- the broad breasted white, broad breasted bronze, white Holland, bourbon red, and a host of other breeds – all of them descended from our native wild turkey. 
 
More than 140,000 servings of Vermont wild turkeys are harvested each year – that's 140,000 servings of free-ranging, wild and sustainably harvested protein. 
 
Wild turkeys exist throughout Vermont today, but that was not always the case.  Wild turkeys disappeared from Vermont in the mid-to-late 1800s due to habitat destruction when land was cleared for farming and only 25 percent of the state was covered by forest.
 
The wild turkeys we see in Vermont today originated from just 31 wild turkeys stocked in Southwestern Vermont by the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department in 1969 and 1970.  Vermont's forest habitat was once again capable of supporting turkeys.  State wildlife biologists moved groups of these birds northward, and today Vermont's population of turkeys is estimated at close to 50,000.    
 
This is just one of many wildlife restoration success stories we can be thankful for in 2024.  Funding for Vermont's wild turkey restoration was derived from the sale of hunting licenses and a federal tax on hunting equipment. 
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