03/08/2023
It is with a very heavy heart in which I write this post and inform the birding community that one of the city Rufous owls was rescued and bought into care this week and after a thorough veterinary assessment it was determined that the head trauma he had sustained had caused permanent eyesight loss to the bird and thus humane euthanasia was decided. It’s thought that he had already a deficit in the left eye with scarring and damage to both front and back chambers of the eye and extensive bleeding in the right eye which was unlikely to resolve and he was indeed blind. We believe that it was one of the Grafton St - Pier pairs (s*x yet to be determined)
The most heartbreaking part of this story is that Wildlife & Raptor Care Queensland have now been involved with rescue and rehabilitation of one of each of the three pairs in the Cairns region, with last being the Les Davies Park female rufous before Christmas, dying several days later in care from vehicle strike, necropsy revealing a fatal bleed in the liver. This pair were fraught with many complications in the past breeding seasons and WARCQ also tried incredibly hard to nurse one of their chicks in October 2021 from Asian honeybee stings which proved to also be fatal for the young owlet.
As for the Freshwater female she did not return home to her territory after coming in with a infective eye in May 2022.
We do not know what this means for our very loved Rufous owls here in the city landscape of Cairns… they are the largest owl in the wet tropics of Australia with a subspecies in NT and Cape York. WARCQ do average a few coming into care across our region each year for many reasons, some are lucky enough to be returned into their territories, others have had resources put in to them as young birds to find them new territories and others such as this post have not lived another day. If there is anything which can be added, not one bird which comes through our doors would have come here if it wasn’t for the failings of humans, and if it wasn’t for the few who are reading this now also with heavy hearts it’s the people like you who help us keep going on. With your support we are encouraged to continue the work we do.
Amber🪶