Fledgling

How to Help Injured Wildlife

PETA Australia

Wildlife

It can be difficult to know how to help if you come across an injured or orphaned animal. Sometimes people with even the best intentions inadvertently do more harm than good when they don’t fully understand what an animal needs.

Let us help you to be as prepared as possible so you can give wildlife the best chance of survival.

*Click here for a larger version of this infographic

 

Additional Points to Remember

 

Who Can Help – a Vet, a Rescuer or a Wildlife Carer?

Vets are best equipped to treat injured animals in 99 per cent of cases, as they have the necessary pain relief on hand to administer to an animal in pain.

Rescuers can be called on to help animals you can’t catch. Carers can rehabilitate animals, if that’s necessary.

If a local RSPCA wildlife hospital is nearby, it will be the best place to take injured animals. If none is nearby, emergency vets are the best option. They see a lot more wildlife than regular vets, as they’re open all night, when most wildlife is found.

Most people live within half an hour or so of an emergency vet.

If an emergency vet isn’t nearby, please take the animal to the nearest vet you do have. Vets are obliged by law to treat wildlife for free.

 

More on Baby Birds

Know the difference between a baby bird who needs help and one who will be OK if left alone.

If birds are unable to flutter back up a tree unattended, please do not leave them be. Parents may feed them on the ground, but they usually can’t carry them back up a tree. Featherless babies should always be taken in for care if found on the ground.

Featherless Baby
Fledgling

The best thing you can do is always be proactive when it comes to wildlife you think might be injured or orphaned. Please don’t “leave it to someone else” to help. We are that someone else!