FYI.       5/20/22
lab of O receptionist just told me they will not accept any bird carcasses due 
to Avian Flu.
I just tried to give him an oriole that most likely was struck by a car in my 
road. But since i did not witness actual strike, he could not accept the dead 
bird.
I found it in middle of road. Looked freshly killed.

Donna Scott
Lansing
Sent from my iPhone

On May 18, 2022, at 11:10 AM, b_clise <b_cl...@yahoo.com> wrote:


Late yesterday I discovered a deal female Baltimore Oriole in my yard. Since 
their arrival, I've seen several here, observed nest building in 3 locations, 
and have been going through grape jelly at a feverish pace. I considered 
retrieving the body for donation, but a male has been frequently landing on the 
carcass, looking at it, fluttering it's wings, then flying off, several times 
per hour. I opted to let nature take its course and let the poor little guy go 
through its grieving process ( if that's what's going on?). Also worth noting , 
I have no orioles at my feeder (highly irregular) and only 2 males chasing 
eachother through my yard, versus the presence of several in the trees. I'm not 
sure why these sudden changes but will keep watch. I can only guess some sort 
of predation. Barbara Clise,  in King Ferry



Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone


-------- Original message --------
From: Irby Lovette <i...@cornell.edu>
Date: 5/16/22 11:48 AM (GMT-05:00)
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L <cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] bird carcasses for the Cornell Museum of Vertebrates

Dear Cayugabirds community —

When you encounter birds in New York State that have died of natural causes and 
that are in good condition, please consider donating them to become specimens 
in the Cornell Museum of Vertebrates, which is located in the same building as 
the Lab of Ornithology. At the CUMV we largely rely on these ’salvage’ 
specimens to keep our collection current, as there are all kinds of things one 
can do with a modern specimen that can’t so easily be done with older specimens.

We maintain all New York and federal permits for this purpose. We do not 
maintain state permits for most other states, so please do not donate birds 
from farther afield.

The major exception pertains to Bald and Golden Eagles: special federal laws 
cover eagles and we are not allowed to accept eagle materials.

When preparing to bring us a bird carcass:

1. Place it in a ziplock-type bag, one bird per bag.
2. Inside the bag include a slip of paper that notes the date the bird was 
found, the location, and your name. Specimens without date and location have 
little research value.
3. Put the bag in your freezer if you must, but then bring it to us as soon as 
possible (technically, you are allowed to possess these birds only if you are 
actively bringing them to a designated museum like the CUMV).
4. On arrival at the Lab during open visitor hours, just let the person at the 
front reception desk know that you want to drop off a specimen.

Please be sure to consider your own personal health and safety when handling 
dead birds. If you can use a ziplock like a ‘glove’ and never touch the bird, 
so much the better. If you need to touch it, wash your hands immediately and 
thoroughly. As you probably know, this is an avian flu outbreak year, so being 
especially cautious is wise (though there have been no human cases thus far). 
Personally I would not hesitate to bring in a bird that died of a known trauma 
like a window-strike, cat kill, or car-strike, but I would think twice about 
handling without PPE a dead bird found with no known cause of death.

Best to all,

Irby Lovette
Director, CUMV


Begin forwarded message:

From: Andrew David Miller 
<andrew.mil...@cornell.edu<mailto:andrew.mil...@cornell.edu>>
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Lawrence's warbler - mortality
Date: May 16, 2022 at 9:12:34 AM EDT
To: CAYUGABIRDS-L 
<cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu<mailto:cayugabird...@list.cornell.edu>>
Reply-To: Andrew David Miller 
<andrew.mil...@cornell.edu<mailto:andrew.mil...@cornell.edu>>

Due to the rarity of this warbler, I thought that some might be interested in 
the following.  I found a window mortality Lawrence’s warbler outside of the 
Veterinary Research Tower on Cornell’s campus this morning.  Bird mortalities 
have decreased here since they put new glass in about 6 years ago, but every 
spring and fall there are still a few dead birds that I find. In case anyone 
wants the bird for study, I have saved it in my lab freezer.

-Andrew Miller

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