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Enthusiastic citizen Kim Tong-yan and the "Strange Fate of Man and Bird" of the Hairy-Footed Eagle

author:Daqing Net
Enthusiastic citizen Kim Tong-yan and the "Strange Fate of Man and Bird" of the Hairy-Footed Eagle

Send the hairy-footed eagle to a wildlife rescue center.

Enthusiastic citizen Kim Tong-yan and the "Strange Fate of Man and Bird" of the Hairy-Footed Eagle

Feed the woolly ducks meat.

  The "child" is a large bird, fifty or sixty centimeters long. On May 26, when Jin Tongyan sent the "child" to the Daqing Wildlife Rescue Center, he learned that it was a national second-level protected animal, the kuáng.

  Jin Tongyan's family lived in the Ranghu Road Xixiao community, and before retiring, he served as the director of the Ranghu Road Station Police Station. Everyone knows that he is warm-hearted and loves to ask him for help in everything. Not long ago, a neighbor in the same building wandered by the moon bubble and found a bird with an injured left wing, a dark gray beak, yellow toes, and brown claws, looking like an "eagle", lying on the ground. The neighbor carried the bird back and knocked on the door of Kim's house.

  We all know that Daqing has increased its ecological protection in recent years, and the ecological environment has become good year by year. Jin Tongyan read the media reports and knew that there are currently more than 270 kinds of wild birds in the city, saying that the total number of monitored arrivals has reached a record high. Although he often goes to the surrounding wetlands at leisure and sees flocks of water birds playing by the water, it is the first time for Jin Tongyan to "face to face" with wild birds at such a close distance.

  Jin Tongyan walked around the nearby pet clinic holding the bird, but the staff was "helpless" about the bird injury. The injured birds could not forage, and it was not easy to survive when released, so Jin Tongyan temporarily left the birds at home to nurse their wounds, and took them to the community square to bask in the sun during the day, and the enthusiastic residents helped take care of them. "Like everyone's child, let's call it 'child'!" Kim Tung-yan named the bird.

  Jin Tongyan found that "children" like to eat meat, chicken and beef, do not eat lamb, he buys some fresh meat for "children" every day. Under his careful care, the "child" is the closest to him, and the things that others feed do not eat or touch. Everyone found that when the "child" felt dangerous or afraid, he either curled up, or sat with his abdomen facing forward and raised his paws, and only when Jin Tongyan was around, his mood was stable...

  But the injury of the "child" is always bad, Jin Tongyan inquired around, heard that the Daqing Wildlife Rescue Center can be cured, after contact, he and the resident of the community Hu Jing sent the "child" to the rescue center.

  Wang Quanshan, a keeper at the rescue center, told them that the "child" is a rare winter migratory bird, the national second-class wild protected animal hairy-footed eagle, named after the abundant feathers covering the toes. The woolly hawk breeds further north in Russia, south to northeast China for the winter, and some will fly to Daqing and fly back when the weather is warm. They prefer the wilderness the most, feeding on small rodents such as voles and small birds, as well as larger animal young birds such as hares and pheasants. The rescue center will treat the "child" professionally, and after being cured, it will be released.

  Writing in a wildlife rescue archive notebook, Kim Tong-yan is the 39th person to send injured wildlife to a rescue center this year. When the "child" has a new home, he has to stay with him for a while, and then leave after the keeper is familiar with the "child".

  "Bye-bye, I'll see you in two days!" Before leaving, Jin Tongyan wrote down the keeper's phone and waved goodbye to the woolly bird.

  Jin Tongyan said that the time with the hairy-footed bird was wonderful, and it also taught him the common sense of wildlife rescue: if a wild animal is found in an urban area, if there is no injury, the best way to deal with it is to directly release it back to nature; If you are injured, contact the Wildlife Rescue Center (0459-6207652) for professional rescue.

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