Tag Archives: swans

Baby swans rescued from Esplanade ‘doing well’ after parents with bird flu symptoms euthanized

BOSTON – Baby swans living in Boston are safe after their parents got sick and had to be euthanized.

Animal control officers rescued all five little swans from the Esplanade Wednesday. Their parents had shown signs of the highly contagious bird flu.

The cygnets are just a few weeks old. Four out of five are doing very well, and one has a significant foot injury. But they are all “resting comfortably together” at the Cape Wildlife Center.

Today we admitted 5 cygnets from the Esplanade in Boston.

According to observers and Boston Animal Control their…

Posted by Cape Wildlife Center on Wednesday, June 29, 2022

The hope is to release the baby swans back to the Esplanade when they are big enough. They are currently being isolated as researchers await testing for avian flu. 



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2 Charles River Swans Sick With Bird Flu Killed, Babies Rescued – NBC Boston

A pair of sick swans at Boston’s Charles River Esplanade were euthanized this week, and five baby swans were later taken to a wildlife center to be evaluated, according to the city.

The sick swans had avian flu, the city said, which has been blamed for other bird kills around the country this year.

The Charles River Esplanade cases were reported by multiple people to Boston’s Animal Care & Control Division, which investigated Monday and was able to capture the birds with help from the Boston Fire Department, a city representative said.

The birds were “quite ill,” the representative said in a statement, and were euthanized.

On Wednesday morning, five cygnets — the baby swans — were rescued by animal control officials and taken to Cape Wildlife Center to be evaluated.

With the virus in Vermont, the state veterinarian wants farmers and backyard chicken raisers here to limit contact between their flocks and wild birds, to quarantine domesticated birds coming in from other farms, and to make sure boots and equipment aren’t contaminated with bird droppings — a common way influenza spreads between animals.

A new strain of bird flu has been alarming animal experts nationwide, killing wild birds, including bald eagles, and resulting in the culling of tens of millions of farm-raised chickens and turkeys since February.

Earlier this month, animal control officials on Tisbury in Martha’s Vineyard issued an “avian influenza warning” after hundreds of dead cormorants washed up around the island. Bird flu was suspected and being tested for; the officials said a new strain of the virus could be a major issue that may take years to recover from.

Officials in Maine have issued a warning about the H5N1 strain of highly pathogenic avian influenza

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