• Welcome to Avian Avenue! To view our forum with less advertisments please register with us.
    Memberships are free and it will just take a moment. Click here

What's Happening To The Parrots of Telegraph Hill?

Lady Jane

Ripping up the road
Avenue Veteran
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
8/25/12
Messages
26,614
Location
Maryland
Real Name
Dianne
Campus News
Bromethalin is poisoning the parrots of Telegraph Hill
19 hours ago
by Kat Gilmore



Bromethalin, a common rat poison, is the agent responsible for a neurological disease that has sickened or killed birds from a popular flock of naturalized parrots that reside primarily in the Telegraph Hill area in north San Francisco, according to a new study led by the University of Georgia Infectious Diseases Laboratory and funded by Mickaboo Companion Bird Rescue.

The study, published today in PLOS ONE, caps a multi-year effort to determine the cause of the disease, which has been observed in parrots from this flock since at least 1999.

“The investigation, inspired and funded by Mickaboo, required a team of veterinarians, pathologists and researchers. It is only because the poisoned birds were feral parrots that the condition was so thoroughly investigated,” said first author Fern Van Sant, whose clinic, For the Birds, in San Jose, California, provided care for many of the affected parrots. “The findings offer us an opportunity to assess the true risk of this rodenticide to pets and feral animals and to clarify the risk of potential soil and water contamination.”

The study focused on four parrots that presented in 2018 with a set of characteristic neurologic signs that attending veterinarians say most affected birds exhibit to varying degrees: ataxia, circling, seizures and tumbling. Three of these parrots, like many before them, were euthanized when their condition worsened and they could no longer self-feed.

The study team looked for bromethalin, or its active metabolite desmethyl-bromethalin, based on their findings in 15 historic cases from 2013 through 2017. The historic cases lacked evidence of viruses known to cause neurologic disease in parrots, as well as of exposure to lead or other toxins. But pathologists found consistent lesions in the central nervous system that suggested bromethalin poisoning.

Bromethalin is difficult to detect, especially in living animals, and particularly in free-ranging birds. Some assays have successfully detected bromethalin in fat tissue of animals, but birds typically do not have surplus fat from which samples can be drawn and tested. In their study, the UGA-led team screened fecal samples from live birds, as well as liver and brain samples from deceased parrots. Co-author Sayed M. Hassan, director of the UGA Laboratory for Environmental Analysis in the Center for Applied Isotope Studies, detected both bromethalin and desmethyl-bromethalin in brain, liver and fecal samples utilizing high-performance liquid chromatography.

The study’s findings suggest that parrots do not metabolize the potent neurotoxin in the same manner that has been described in other species, and/or that the parrots are ingesting a sublethal dose. The authors do not know how the parrots are being exposed to bromethalin, but they are planning a follow-up study to determine the source.

“We now need funding from individuals and groups interested in protecting our environment to help us understand if this toxin is accumulating in a space where it could pose a health risk in other free-ranging animals, or, possibly, in companion animals and people,” said co-author Branson W. Ritchie, a veterinary research professor and co-director of the Infectious Diseases Laboratory.

The birds primarily reside in neighborhoods near the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and frequent the area’s parks, but affected birds have been found throughout San Francisco, including on busy streets and downtown sidewalks. The total number of birds affected to date is difficult to estimate, but from 2003 through 2018, Mickaboo Companion Bird Rescue had established records on 158 San Francisco parrots, of which 55 died, 53 were adopted, 22 were released including three that escaped, and 25 remain in foster care. Of the birds in foster care or adopted, many have persistent neurologic deficits, including paresis and ataxia, that require special care.

Members of the public who come in contact with a possibly affected parrot should immediately report the bird and its location to San Francisco Animal Care and Control, 415-554-9400; the poisoned birds need professional help and should not be handled or harmed. If necessary, a towel can be used to move the bird to a secure box or dog kennel.

“Mickaboo Companion Bird Rescue is grateful to Dr. Van Sant, the University of Georgia, and all of the skilled professionals who have worked so hard and so long to find out what was killing these beautiful birds,” said Michelle Yesney, current CEO of Mickaboo. The parrots and their plight gained notoriety after being featured in a book and a documentary both titled “The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill.”

Coauthors on the study included Drury Reavill, of the Zoo/Exotic Pathology Service, Carmichael, California; Elizabeth W. Howerth and Mauricio Seguel, of the Department of Pathology in the College of Veterinary Medicine; Rita McManamon, Christopher R. Gregory, and Paula G. Ciembor, of the Infectious Diseases Laboratory in the College of Veterinary Medicine; Kathy M. Loftis, of the Center for Applied Isotope Studies; and Richard Bauer, a graduate student in the Laboratory for Environmental Analysis. “Evidence of bromethalin toxicosis in San Francisco ‘Telegraph Hill’ conures,” is available online at Evidence of bromethalin toxicosis in feral San Francisco “Telegraph Hill” conures

Center for Applied Isotope Studies College of Veterinary Medicine Infectious Diseases News Release Research
 

Davi

Rollerblading along the road
Avenue Concierge
Joined
12/12/17
Messages
1,519
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
Real Name
Davi
Thank you for sharing this update on them (although "feral parrots" sounds harsh, lol)
 

Lady Jane

Ripping up the road
Avenue Veteran
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
8/25/12
Messages
26,614
Location
Maryland
Real Name
Dianne
I agree with you about the use of feral parrots, better to be wild parrots.
 

Davi

Rollerblading along the road
Avenue Concierge
Joined
12/12/17
Messages
1,519
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
Real Name
Davi
Right! Somehow I associate "feral" with predator-type animals only, not prey.
 

Tiel Feathers

Joyriding the Neighborhood
Avenue Veteran
Celebirdy of the Month
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
9/15/14
Messages
20,193
Location
Quincy,CA
Real Name
Deanna
Thoae poor birds! :( I used to see them when I lived in San Francisco. I hope they find out the source.
 

Mockinbirdiva

Cruising the avenue
Avenue Veteran
Celebirdy of the Month
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
11/20/09
Messages
11,338
Location
South Carolina
Real Name
Andrea
I would be highly suspicious of some sick individual putting this poison out for those birds. In our area, just this past week there are two wild mallard ducks with blow darts through their heads and necks. They are still swimming around in a local area of water and there are people trying to catch them so they can be treated. These are no dinky darts. Sadly, our world is full of sick people with no regard to our wild life.


Reward offered after Murrells Inlet ducks tortured with blow darts


By WMBF News Staff | March 17, 2019 at 10:13 AM EST - Updated March 18 at 1:36 PM
MURRELLS INLET, SC (WMBF) - Officials are looking for answers Sunday after a pair of ducks were found injured.

Pictured surfaced on social media Sunday of a pair of ducks found near the Murrells Inlet International Golf Course, with blow dart injuries. One duck appears to have been shot in the head and the other in the neck.
 

mariana

Checking out the neighborhood
Joined
10/21/19
Messages
2
I have one of these birds! She can't perch correctly, so she wasn't able to be re-released. And it's not that people are leaving rat poison out for the parrots, it's that rat poison will contaminate the soil and has spread to the flock. It's so bad that they are now trying to research where the parrots have picked it up because the levels are high enough to damage humans.
 

Tiel Feathers

Joyriding the Neighborhood
Avenue Veteran
Celebirdy of the Month
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
9/15/14
Messages
20,193
Location
Quincy,CA
Real Name
Deanna
I have one of these birds! She can't perch correctly, so she wasn't able to be re-released. And it's not that people are leaving rat poison out for the parrots, it's that rat poison will contaminate the soil and has spread to the flock. It's so bad that they are now trying to research where the parrots have picked it up because the levels are high enough to damage humans.
That’s so sad, and I hope they can find the source.:( You’ll have to tell us more about your bird and post some pictures!
 

Rain Bow

Rollerblading along the road
Mayor of the Avenue
Avenue Spotlight Award
Joined
5/3/17
Messages
4,727
This is terrible! I thought this was an article I've read before & when I opened it :grumpy:
 
Top