Monday, July 11, 2011

Conjoined robins separated, one in critical condition

A pair of conjoined robins that were discovered in Centerville are now separated. But it turns out that the fledgling birds were not born that way — instead, they "grew" together. When Priscilla Todd's son spotted the hapless pair on Wednesday evening, she took them in, hoping a veterinarian would step in and help them.



The bird-siblings had been flapping around helplessly on the ground. When the stronger, bigger bird tried to fly, it would drag the other along with it, risking injury to both. Dr. Douglas Folland of Clearfield did step in. He surgically separated the birds on Friday, free of charge.

But he told Todd it was a small plastic thread, not a birth defect that was the culprit. The robins originated in separate eggs. Somehow, the thread got lodged between them after they had hatched, and their skin and feathers grew over it, attaching them permanently.


YouTube link.

Todd, who is an experienced bird rescuer, says the prognosis for the stronger bird is excellent. It will be released to the wild after a little rest and recovery time at the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in Ogden. However, the smaller bird had to undergo a partial wing amputation and is in critical condition, Todd said. If it survives, the rehabilitation center has offered to keep it as a mascot.

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