-
Rescued
animal or bird guidelines
Rescue
Possum Release
Nest Boxes
Emergency Rescue Formula
Feeding Programme
-
How?
What?
When?
Problems -
Birds and Meat Eaters
-
Rescued Birds
Baby Birds
Nectiverous Birds
Meat Eaters -
Vets
Rescue
How
can you help our wildlife?
Put nest
boxes up in your garden to give the possums and birds a habitat. Keep
your cats in at night; the well fed domestic cat is one of the
greatest killers of our wildlife. Develop a compost heap to provide
food for wildlife. Check the pouches of road kills. You can
remove the poach young, put them inside your jumper to warm them,
then telephone me on the above numbers for assistance or leave a
message and I will call you as soon as I can.
Otherwise,
call:
· The Native Animal Network on 8388
6944, or -
.
RSPCA (08) 8382 0888 or (08) 8231 2120 for after hours
emergencies.
-
.
Cleland Wildlife Park for Koala emergencies - (08) 8273 4176
You can visit the Bird Care & Conservation
Society web: www.birdcare.asn.au
Back to top
Possum
Release
Our environment today is not always a safe place to release possums and
kangaroos. Habitat destruction causes stress from lack of food and competition
for nest sites. Hunters, vehicles, dogs, cats, foxes, and fences all cause
problems for our possums, kangaroos and birds.
Only the fittest animals survive in the wild. Birds and animals that are not
100% fit must not be released - it is kinder to euthanase them if they can't
accept captivity.
Possums are very territorial and will kill intruders. For this reason they must
only be released into their own territories, so that food and water supplies,
shelter and mates are not disturbed, leading to fighting and stress related
diseases.
By
providing a nest box for shelter in your own backyard, and erecting
a feeding platform for food, you are taking an important step towards
a positive solution to the conservation of Australia's native animals.
Back to top
Nest
Boxes
A
variety of nest boxes are available to provide suitable outdoor
housing. These need to be placed 3 to 4 meters up a tree so that
cats can't easily climb to them. Remember that brushtail possums
are wild native animals. Do not expect them to become tame.
Do not
disturb them once they are using the box or they may abandon their young. They
usually breed in Autumn and Spring. The single young spends 4 to 5 months in
the pouch (ring tails usually have twins). It then spends another 1 to 2 months
suckling and riding on it's mother's back.
Do check your nesting box for unwanted tenants such as sparrows and starlings.
These introduced birds may take over the nest site.
Once
the nest bob is installed, any access holes in your roof or wall spaces need to
be sealed. Preferably this should be with material like timber, or pulled out,
like wire netting.
Possums
usually leave the roof space about 9 pm for feeding, so leave sealing the
access points until approximately 11 pm. That way you avoid trapping the possum
inside and condemning it to a slow painful death of starvation. You will
probably hear the possum trying to reenter the space at about 4 am for several
nights thereafter.
Back to top
Emergency Rescue Formula
The
first priority is to warm the animal or bird to about 32 degrees with a hot
water bottle, electric heat pad or a desk lamp. Do not feed them for at least
one hour, and leave them in dark, quit, warm place to recover from shock.
Rescued kangaroos and possums can safely be fed
tinned Carnation
Evaporated Milk, watered down with a tin and a quarter
of water, given with an eye dropper or a syringe. Possums prefer the
milk sweetened with a little honey. Other emergency milks are condensed
milk (with 2 tins of water added), soy milk, goat's milk or powdered
full milk.
Most
birds can safely be fed Heinz high protein baby cereal mixed with warm water,
with a pinch of glucodin for energy. Nectiverous birds, such as lorikeets, need
a nectar mix of one cup of sugar or honey, one cup of farex, one raw egg and 6
drops of pentavite made up to one liter with cold water. One cup of Wombaroo
nectar mix can be added. These birds need a constant supply to survive. Tinned
dog food is best for magpies, with grated cheese and chick crumbs added.
Wombaroo Insectivore mix can be added.
GOOD
LUCK! Bev.
Back to top
Feeding Programme
Do
not feed a cold possum
-
wrap it in a sock, beanie, towel or jumper and warm it gradually
with a heat pad, hot water bottle, electric blanket or your body
heat to approximately 30 degrees. A cold possum cannot swallow and
the milk may go into its lungs.
How
-
measure
out approx. 10 mls of milk (to allow for spillage) into a medicine
glass and float that in a cup of hot water to warm it up. Wrap
the possum in an old rug so it feels secure and to keep the pouch
clean to avoid bacteria breeding in the spilt milk. Always wipe
off the milk from the fur as it can cause t to fall out. Use a
syringe, or an eye dropper.
What
-
Evaporated milk with 1 ¼ tins water added. Freeze most
of this in small containers, eg. Ice block trays, to avoid it
going off before the possum can get trough it. Condensed milk
with 2 tins water added. Soy, Goat or powdered milk are also suitable.
Hesitant feeders can be encouraged to drink by sweetening the
milk with glucose, which also gives them some energy. Honey, jam,
brandy, and banana essence have also been known to work. Pentavite
vitamins ensure a good, healthy coat add one drop to each 5ml.
feed. Farex baby cereal adds bulk to the milk and helps to fill
them up. Add a good pinch per feed.
When
-
Approx.
8am, 12pm, 5pm, 10pm. Volume at the end of the day matters most,
not what time it is fed. Over a matter of weeks, gradually cut
out the lunch feed, then the evening fed and offer the milk in
a small lid. Eventually the possum will only require a dish of
milk morning and night, then only at night in a D cup bird feeder.
Problems
-
Refusing milk. The milk may be to hot, to
cold, wrong flavor or the possum may not be hungry. Try increasing
the time before feeds. Over feeding can cause diarrhea. Cut back
on the amount fed and give one drop of Kaomagma per fed until
controlled. Also overheating, wrong milk, poor hygiene, stress,
thrush, change of diet (natural to artificial), and poor gut
flora. Acidophilus or natural yogurt in the milk can help. Never
give antibiotics by mouth, always by injection. Bloat occurs when
there is a build up of gas, and the tummy looks distended and
tight. If this happens, veterinary attention should
be sought
immediately or the animal stands a good chance of dying. They may then
need pain killers, anti-inflamatories and possibly anti-biotics.
Give
a possum a crown mint or Quick ease every night, massage tummy
and place a small wheat bag onto the area to relax the muscles.
·
Temperature - Keep the possum
30 to 32 degrees warm constantly with a heat pad, wheat bag, hot
water bottle or light tin. Use a 15 watt, 250 volt globe.
·
Toileting - After feeding
your possum you will need to stimulate it to urinate and defecate
by gently tickling their bottom with the corner of a damp tissue,
as if the mother was licking them. There is only one opening called
cloaca, for all the body functions. Some possums feed better if
toileted before or in the middle of a feed.
·
Handling - Only handle them
at feed time for the first week to minimize their stress and to
let them settle to your routine. Try to avoid waking them in-between
for show and tell to friends, too much will kill them. Always
hold them in a pouch so the feel secure.
·
Housing - Hand raised possums
cannot be simply let go to live happily ever after. Possums are
territorial and they will kill any intruders. The have not been
taught survival skills, but have been desensitized to the danger
of dogs, cats humans ect. It is a cruel cop out to release hand
raised possum. Baby possums can be kept in a small carry cage
to sleep in during the day as long as you are able to let it out
in your house to play each evening. Eventually the possum will
require an outside aviary, as the weather warms up from winter
or cools off a bit from summer.
·
Solids - Offer small pieces
of apple, banana, or jam on bread in their pouch at night and
you will soon find them munching away. Always provide fresh, shallow
drinking water. Ringtails (white tails) need native plants like
eucalyptus young leaves and flowers of wattle, bottlebrush, melaleuca,
leptospermum, and roses. Also offer fruits and vegetables. Brushtails
(black, fluffy tails) as for the ringtails also broccoli, celery,
sweet potato, lettuce, capsicum, parsley, carrot, grapes, cheese,
fritz, jam sandwiches, tomatoes, watermelon, rockmelon, cucumber,
banana-no peel, pears, roses (hybrid tea), silverbeet, walnuts,
passion fruit, boiled potatoes and rice, crushed pineapple, corn,
cooked peas & carrots, raisins, sultanas, dried fruit, bread
in carnation milk & sugar, rolled oats, muslie bars, biscuits,
tinned fruits, baby food, avocado, pumpkin, strawberries, kiwi
fruit, nuttela, vegemite, honey, orange-no peel, boiled eggs,
sunflower seeds, dry dog food, roo or rabbit pellets, grape vine
leaves, almonds, pureed apple baby cereal, gum leaf tips, crown
mints, parsley.
Back
to top
Birds
and Meat Eaters
Rescued
birds -
As
with possums always warm the bird in a dark box, with a hot water
and a bottle, lamp or electric blanket, for at least one hour,
to recover, from shock, before offering it a drink of water.
Most
baby birds -
can
be fed Farex baby cereal mixed with warm water, and a pinch of
glucodin for energy, on a spoon or a syringe. Cookies pigeons,
parrots, and sparrows can all be fed on this mixture.
Nectiverous
birds -
like
lorikeets, wattle birds & honey eaters can be fed a nectar
mix using 1 cup of honey or sugar, 1 cup of farex, 1 raw egg,
6 pentavite vitamin drops, all mixed up together and made up to
a litre with water. 1 cup of Wombaroo nectar mix can also be added.
These birds need constant supply to survive.
Meat
eaters -
like magpies, minors, ravens, need a
high calcium intake, so tinned dog food is suitable with chick
crumbles added, or grated cheese, and boiled egg. Wombaroo insectivore
mix can also be added. Always find out what species you have,
from a book or over the phone from a Vet, my self or other rescue
workers, to ensure you are feeding the correct diet for the maximum
chance of survival. I can help you with raising or recuperating
anything for re-release in its own territory or with foster carers.
Don't leave it too late to get advice.
Back
to top
Vets
Dr Rachel Westcott, ph 8370-7044 or
Dr Mark Hill, ph 8295 6924
Back to top
|