Seabirds stuck after major East Coast storm pushes them deep inland | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Seabirds stuck after major East Coast storm pushes them deep inland

Hope Swinimer, facility operator of Hope for Wildlife, poses in the educational centre at the animal rehabilitation facility in Seaforth, N.S. on Friday, Feb.12, 2016. Swinimer, the founder of Hope for Wildlife in Seaforth, N.S., says the wildlife refuge is helping to mend a large number of seabirds battered by the high winds and waves. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

SEAFORTH, N.S. - Seabirds rarely seen on land were stuck, stranded and unable to take flight, after being pushed far inland during last week's violent East Coast windstorm.

Many of the seabirds — including the tiny, black-and-white dovekie — have legs that are further back on their bodies, making them unable to take flight once they're on land.

Hope Swinimer, the founder of Hope for Wildlife in Seaforth, N.S., says the birds have to take off from the crest of waves or from the ocean itself.

The centre received more than 350 calls from people who had found birds injured or unable to take flight after the storm.

She says they have treated about 80 birds suffering everything from exhaustion to broken legs, broken wings and head trauma.

Swinimer says about 70 per cent of their patients have been returned to the ocean, but a number of them did not recover.

The storm lashed Atlantic Canada with strong onshore winds, rain, snow and storm surges, resulting in coastal damage and power outages.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2018
The Canadian Press

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