1 peregrine falcon fledgling from Reading nest still alive
A diseased female is euthanized, while the lone surviving raptor, a male, is doing well.
Three of this year's four peregrine falcon fledglings in Reading have died, less than two months after they hatched.
A female bird which had been suffering from a deadly parasitic disease was euthanized Wednesday morning, after the infection had eaten through its digestive organs.
"It was not going to survive," said Peggy Hentz, owner of Red Creek Wildlife Center near Schuylkill Haven, Schuykill County.
She was treating the bird for trichomoniasis, which forms a growth that invades the digestive system.
Hentz decided that euthanization was the best course of action.
"What we ended up doing was saving it from further suffering," she said.
A male bird, the fourth to be located after its siblings fledged June 9, was found dead in its parents' nest in center city Reading on Monday.
F. Arthur McMorris, the peregrine falcon coordinator with the Pennsylvania Game Commission, said it is unknown whether that bird ever left the nest.
No one had checked the nest since May 21, when the new birds were banded, so as not to disturb the family.
Personnel from the Game Commission brought the bird's body to Red Creek, where Hentz said she was not able to determine its cause of death.
"It had decomposed so thoroughly that there was no way that we could determine the immediate cause," she said.
Hentz said it appeared that this bird died before the other ones had even gotten sick.
Another female bird had been found dead Sunday at the rehabilitation center where it was being treated. It had also suffered from trichomoniasis.
The only survivor is a male bird that remains at Red Creek after sustaining a head injury when hit by a car. It is flying in an outdoor pen at the center, exercising and eating well.
Hentz said it will be returned to its parents' nest.
"The good news is we did save one," she said.
The lone surviving peregrine falcon fledgling from a center city Reading nest in a cage at the Red Creek Wildlife Center near Schuylkill Haven.