PRATT Preservation of Wildlife and Wildlands

PRATT Preservation of Wildlife and Wildlands Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from PRATT Preservation of Wildlife and Wildlands, Wildlife sanctuary, Sand Castle Drive, Mantoloking, NJ.

PRATT PRESERVATION's Mission is to unite Animal Lovers and Appreciators of Nature throughout the WORLD to:
-PROTECT ANIMALS
-PRESERVE NATURAL LANDS
-PROMOTE LOVE OF ALL ANIMALS
-PREVENT EXTINCTION
-PREVAIL IN CREATING A HARMONIOUS ANIMAL/HUMAN COEXISTENCE

Captivity & Cruelty Crushes Creatures! Animals deserve to live  FREELY!COEXIST WITH WILDLIFE! DON'T CAGE SENTIENT LIVING...
06/22/2026

Captivity & Cruelty Crushes Creatures! Animals deserve to live FREELY!
COEXIST WITH WILDLIFE! DON'T CAGE SENTIENT LIVING ANIMALS!










For sixteen years, a black bear named Ricki paced back and forth across the same patch of concrete. Over and over. Day after day.

Her home was a 250-square-foot cage outside an ice cream shop in York County, Pennsylvania, right next to a mini golf course. For a quarter, customers could drop dog food and corn down a pipe to feed her. That pipe was her only connection to the outside world.

Sanctuary workers would later have a name for the way she walked: "the concrete shuffle." It's a sign experts recognize immediately — a body and mind breaking down from years of confinement with nothing to do and nowhere to go.

In December 2014, four local residents and the Animal Legal Defense Fund had finally seen enough. They filed a lawsuit, arguing Ricki's enclosure was destroying her physically and mentally. The story made national headlines. Two months later, the owner agreed to let her go.

Ricki was driven to a wildlife sanctuary in Colorado and released into 15 acres of open grassland, water holes, and other black bears. A bear named Josie was one of the first to walk over and greet her.

And the pacing stopped.

Staff expected it to take months, maybe years, for her to unlearn sixteen years of trauma. Ricki didn't need that long. She started doing what bears are supposed to do — wandering, digging, wading into water, picking her own spot to sleep each night.

That October, for the first time in her life, she hibernated. Nobody trained her to. Her body simply remembered what it had been waiting to do all along.

Ricki is now around 31 years old. She's spent the last eleven years with grass under her feet and trees over her head — longer than she ever spent on that concrete floor. Black bears in good care can live to 40.

She still has time. And for the first time, she gets to spend it as a bear.

What does it say that it only took one open field and one friendly face for sixteen years of damage to start healing?

06/22/2026

Man continues to take and consume land , destroying critical ecosystems and natural habitats, without a thought to the many animals which are displaced without homes, shelter food or water source and range to roam or hunt for survival.
PLEASE STOP THE SELFISH TAKING AND CONSUMPTION OF WILDLANDS AND COEXIST WITH WILDLIFE! 🐺











06/21/2026

Pangolins are killed for their meat & protective scales. Highly endangered and facing extinction, these animals are in dire need of protection.
💥 DONATE to Save a Pangolin! 💥





Save a Life! Cat's teeth cause deep holes & infection. Please call a mammal wildlife rehabilitaor if you find an injured...
06/07/2026

Save a Life! Cat's teeth cause deep holes & infection. Please call a mammal wildlife rehabilitaor if you find an injured chipmunk, squirrel, rabbit, mouse, bird or other small animal..even if you don't see concealed wounds or blood. Injured animals left on the porch or lawn may appear OK, but they are hurt, in pain and can decline rapidly.
Thank you for caring!









Voices of the Wild Earth

I WASN’T A GIFT ON YOUR DOORMAT.
YOUR CAT’S TEETH WERE TOO SMALL FOR YOU TO SEE.

You found me by the back door.

A chipmunk.

Still breathing.
Still warm.
Still trying to disappear into my own body.

Maybe there was no blood.

Maybe I even looked “fine.”
Maybe your cat dropped me gently, like a toy it had finished with.
Maybe you thought the kindest thing was to put me back under the bushes.

But please do not release me.

I was not playing.

I was punctured.

Cat teeth are small.
Sharp.
Deep.
They can leave wounds so tiny your eyes never find them beneath fur.

But inside me, those invisible holes can become infection, shock, and pain before the sun rises again.

I am a chipmunk.

I was built for tunnels, seeds, roots, fallen logs, and fast little roads through grass.

Not for being carried in a mouth.

Not for becoming entertainment.
Not for being placed outside again while my body is already losing the fight you cannot see.

Please take me seriously.

Put the cat away.
Wear gloves or use a towel.
Place me gently in a small ventilated box with a soft cloth.
Keep me warm, dark, and quiet.

Do not give me food.
Do not give me water.
Do not try to clean the wounds yourself.

Note exactly where I was found.
Call a licensed wildlife rehabilitator, wildlife center, animal control, or your state wildlife agency right away.

Because if a cat caught me, I need help even when I look unhurt.

I was not a present.

I was a wild life
too small to show you
where it hurt.

Wildlife Center of Virginia warns that cat-inflicted wounds can be subtle and says any wild animal caught by a cat should be taken to a permitted wildlife rehabilitator, even if it appears uninjured, because decline can happen quickly. Florida Fish and Wildlife also advises noting the location and contacting a licensed wildlife rehabilitator when wildlife appears injured or orphaned.

Wildlife is being evicted from its natural habitat by overdevelopment! Leash your dog, to avoid close encounters, which ...
06/07/2026

Wildlife is being evicted from its natural habitat by overdevelopment! Leash your dog, to avoid close encounters, which further hurts wildlife. This young mother with babies was attacked by an off-leash dog. Haven't humans taken enough? Wildlife has nowhere else to go. Harmonious coexistence with wildlife dictates that we not impose harm by putting vulnerable wildlife at risk of attack by domestic animals.
Please be considerate and respectful of the defenseless animals with whom we share our parks, neighborhoods and outdoor spaces!
Thank you for caring!








Unless you witness obvious signs of distress, fawns are hiding waiting for Momma Deer to return. Please leave them alone...
06/07/2026

Unless you witness obvious signs of distress, fawns are hiding waiting for Momma Deer to return. Please leave them alone. Observe from a distance, if you have concerns. If the baby is crying incessantly or is in harm's way or imminent danger, such as grass cutting machinery about to slice through the patch of grass where the baby is hiding, then take appropriate action. For assistance, call a Wildlife Rehabilitator.
Thank you for caring!





Please give wildlife parents the opportunity to raise their offspring without kidnapping them.

Just because you see wildlife offspring alone, does not mean they are orphaned or abandoned.

We understand it may seem strange or unnatural but many wildlife young are left alone while parents are off in search of food or to keep predators away from their offspring.

If you are concerned, please take photos & contact a local licensed wildlife rehabilitator or facility near you. Many have social media pages & will respond to questions as well.

Coyotes are monogamous, family oriented, social, intelligent, resilient animals who have persevered despite humans attac...
06/02/2026

Coyotes are monogamous, family oriented, social, intelligent, resilient animals who have persevered despite humans attacking them. Human-Animal Coexistence is key!





The United States has killed roughly half a million coyotes per year for over a century. The coyote's range has expanded by forty percent in the same period.

That sentence contains the entire species in two lines. Every other predator in North America that faced sustained, federally funded lethal control was reduced or eliminated. The wolf was erased from the lower 48 by the 1930s. The grizzly was pushed into a handful of mountain strongholds. The mountain lion was driven out of the eastern two-thirds of the continent. The coyote absorbed the same pressure, the same traps, the same poison, the same aerial gunning, the same bounty systems, and responded by walking into every state the wolf had vacated, every city the mountain lion had abandoned, and every landscape that lethal control was supposed to clear.

Nobody planned this. The coyote was not reintroduced. It was not protected. It was not managed into recovery. It simply refused to be managed out of existence, and the biological machinery that made that possible is stranger than most people realize.
Start with the breeding. A coyote pair that mates in January or February will produce a litter of roughly six pups by April. If the local population is under heavy hunting or trapping pressure, litter sizes increase. Females in heavily persecuted populations produce more pups per litter than females in stable populations. The mechanism is not fully understood, but the effect is measurable and consistent. You kill more coyotes, and the survivors produce more coyotes. The population compensates for removal in real time.

Then there is the pair bond.

Stan Gehrt, a wildlife ecologist at Ohio State University, has been running the largest urban coyote study in history out of Chicago since the year 2000. Over six years, his team genetically sampled 236 coyotes across Cook, Kane, DuPage, and McHenry counties. They tested eighteen litters totaling ninety-six offspring. They were looking for evidence of infidelity, because every other supposedly monogamous canid species that had been genetically tested, including arctic foxes and mountain bluebirds, turned out to be cheating when the DNA was checked.

The coyotes were not cheating. Zero instances of polygamy. Zero instances of extra-pair paternity. Zero instances of a mate leaving while the other was still alive. One hundred percent genetic monogamy across the entire study population.
Gehrt said he was shocked. The Chicago metro area holds an estimated one to two thousand coyotes. Territories abut each other. Males make long-distance forays through other pairs' ranges. The opportunities to stray are constant. They do not take them. Pairs have been tracked staying together for up to ten years, separating only when one of them dies.

During estrus, a mated pair spends every hour together. Running, hunting, marking territory. Cecilia Hennessy, the study's senior author, described it simply. They will always be right at each other's side. The male practices what biologists call diligent mate guarding, staying close to the female and keeping rival males away. But the genetic data suggests the guarding is not even necessary. The females are not interested in other males either.

The payoff of that fidelity is paternal investment. A male coyote that knows every pup in the den is genetically his has a direct evolutionary stake in keeping them alive. He brings food. He defends the den. He teaches the pups to hunt. He spends as much time raising the litter as the female does. In a polygamous species, the male's genetic investment is spread across multiple litters by multiple females, and his per-litter commitment drops accordingly. In a monogamous species with verified genetic fidelity, every calorie the male brings to the den is going to his own offspring. The pair bond is not sentimental. It is the most efficient allocation of parental energy the species has found.

When a mate dies, the surviving coyote grieves. Gehrt documented the behavior across multiple observed deaths in the Chicago study. The surviving animal produces persistent, long howls that researchers describe as mournful. It shows lethargy. Its appetite drops. It returns to the spot where the partner was last seen. During one capture operation, Gehrt briefly sedated a female and took her into the lab for examination. Her mate, standing outside, howled nonstop until Gehrt brought her back. There was clearly a lot of emotional stuff going on with that animal, he said.

Only three to five percent of mammal species are monogamous by any definition. Genetically verified monogamy, where DNA testing confirms that neither partner ever breeds outside the pair, is rarer still. The coyote, the animal that most of North America treats as a pest to be shot on sight, practices a form of pair fidelity that is more absolute than wolves, more consistent than foxes, and more genetically verified than almost any wild carnivore ever studied.
The animal that we have spent a century trying to exterminate mates for life, raises its young cooperatively, grieves its dead, compensates for persecution by producing larger litters, and has responded to the most sustained predator-control campaign in the history of wildlife management by quietly colonizing every state in the continental United States.

We have posted about coyotes on this page before. The Florida Keys coyote. The Chicago parking garage coyote. Carl in Golden Gate Park. Hal in Central Park. Every one of those stories is a footnote in a larger pattern. The coyote is not surviving despite what humans do to it. It is surviving because nothing humans have done to it has been sufficient to outpace an animal that breeds fast, bonds absolutely, and replaces its losses before the next trapping season starts.

Source: Hennessy, C., Gehrt, S.D., et al. (2012). Journal of Mammalogy / Ohio State University / National Geographic, January 2026 / Cook County Coyote Project.

06/02/2026

A rare hybrid population faces an oil frontier with a rescue plan that experts call insufficient.

Address

Sand Castle Drive
Mantoloking, NJ
08738

Telephone

+12016907977

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