Forest Lake Lowdown

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RESCUE: Man saves child from crash in Linwood PAGE 8

Winter waterfowl suffer from lead poisoning

JACKIE BUSSJAEGER | PRESS PUBLICATIONS

Concerned neighbors captured this swan from Bald Eagle Lake and took it to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center, where it was treated for lead poisoning, but did not survive. BY JACKIE BUSSJAEGER STAFF WRITER

This winter, many have noticed that many waterfowl haven’t migrated south. The annual Christmas Bird Count last month determined that the numbers of swans, ducks and geese that seem to be staying for the winter are up; many of them have stayed behind due to longer fall seasons, pockets of warm, open water or the availability of food from locals who put out corn or other feeders. But in the case of a trumpeter swan on the Lino Lakes area of Bald Eagle Lake, at least, the reason may be pollution. The bird arrived on the lake around Christmas, and stayed for more than a week around the North Oaks Docks marina, where there was some open water. Neighbors became suspicious that there was something wrong with the swan, since it wouldn’t eat the corn that had been put out for it and it seemed listless. Some theorized lead poisoning could be the cause, due to the likely presence of lead sinkers in the marina bottom. With this concern, three neighbors captured the swan and took it to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center (WRC) in Roseville, where it was discovered that the animal was hypothermic, lethargic and had two lead objects inside its gastrointestinal tract. Veterinarians performed a procedure called gastric lavage to remove the objects, but on Jan. 15, the WRC reported that the swan had died from the toxicity remaining in its bloodstream. SEE POISONED WATERFOWL, PAGE 12

JACKIE BUSSJAEGER | PRESS PUBLICATIONS

A curious bobcat comes to the fence to inspect visitors at the Wildlife Science Center.

The next steps: Wildlife Science Center begins effort to move from DNR land BY JACKIE BUSSJAEGER STAFF WRITER

COLUMBUS — After the DNR served the Wildlife Science Center with an eviction notice and six months to leave the premises, the WSC is in a frenzy to figure out its next move. Founder Peggy Callahan said that the facility had been planning to move away from DNR land for a while, since the WSC owns a suitable tract of land in Linwood. However, the termination of the lease was unexpected—and unfair, in Callahan’s eyes. Normally, Callahan said the process of moving the facility would take four to six years, and initial estimations of the cost had run up to $6 million. In the face of an imminent move, their timeline has forced them to reduce six years to six months, and $6 million to $500,000.

“We can’t even build until the frost is out, so they’ve given us pretty much three months, not six,” Callahan said. Approximately 100 animals are currently housed at the center, many of them rescued and endangered, including several breeds of wolves, bears, bobcats, lynx, porcupines, foxes, skunks and all manner of raptors. “There are 14 enclosures we have to build for large mammals; it’s not like throwing up a dog kennel,” Callahan said. Everything will have to be built anew—the current enclosures cannot simply be moved, because they will begin to lose structural integrity. Callahan said that the center is trapped “between a rock and a hard place” given the claims of the DNR about its reasons for terminating the lease. A big part of it seems to be the matter of alterations to the facil-

ity—Callahan said that the last time the center was inspected, it was by a fire marshal and the site passed code. Now the DNR is claiming a number of violations that sprung seemingly out of nowhere: things such as improvements made to enlarge an egress window, removing a wood burner and cutting a hole in a wall for a dog door without DNR permission—all things that Callahan said she has not done. In fact, she said the “dog door” referred to is actually an opening cut back in the ‘80s when the site was federally funded, and that it has only ever been used to house singing dogs—a gift from the Minnesota Zoo. Callahan believes that the DNR wants to use the land for storing its fleet of vehicles. SEE WILD LIFE CENTER , PAGE 12

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