Wildlife Education & Rehabilitation Center
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Animal of the Month

This story appears as an on-going series in the "Gilroy Dispatch", "Morgan Hill Times" and "Hollister Freelance".

Animal Enrichment
November, 2013
By Colleen Grzan
PictureZorro the Turkey Vulture
Thanksgiving feast: Succulent turkey and savory pumpkin pie are a wonderful holiday treat for human celebrants, but this turkey VULTURE prefers his pumpkin au naturel, no whipped cream necessary. Because vultures are not vegetarians, the pumpkin was given to Zorro (WERC's non-releasable animal ambassador) for mental, rather than nutritional, enrichment. Just like most of us probably wouldn't enjoy eating meatloaf day after day or watching the same television show over and over, the educational animals at WERC also get bored without variety. 
Providing stimulating and challenging surroundings, food, and activities is critical to an animal's well-being. Enrichment helps keeps the animals mentally and physically fit and reduces stress. Enrichment stimulates the animals' senses-the things they see, smell, hear, touch, and taste. 
At the Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Center we strive to enhance the environments of thecritters under our care to keep them happy and healthy. Each species and individual animal may require different types of stimulus, depending on personal preferences and on which senses are their most acute. 
Visual: Hawks and falcons, for example, have extraordinarily keen vision. Wapeka the red-tailed hawk, though blind in one eye, enjoys a fantastic view of the large rural pond outside her enclosure. She can watch colorful geese and ducks swimming and flying outside. Falcons Horus and Ariel can watch the doves, jays, towhees, and assorted other songbirds that flourish around WERC. It's their own real life Animal Planet show.
Olfactory: People start salivating at the aromas of apple spice cake and honey-baked ham emanating from the oven. Turkey vultures, on the other hand, prefer stinker cuisine. With their outstanding sense of smell, they're able to smell carrion from a mile away while soaring high in the sky. Because Zorro isn't able to fly, we pique his interest in foraging, hiding small rodents enticingly inside objects such as cardboard tubes. 
Auditory: Owls, especially barn owls like Barnadette, have the best hearing in the animal world. While some wildlife facilities may employ taped animal sounds or music to keep the interest of their captive animals, WERC's owl habitats have enclosure-length "windows" overhead and on three sides that allow them to hear the hoots and screeches of the abundant nighttime wildlife scampering and flying in the vicinity of their outdoor habitats.
Tactile: Also known as different strokes for different folks. Rosie the opossum enjoys having her thick fur brushed, which also allows us to examine her closely for possible skin problems. The raptors get tactile enjoyment from the diverse textures of their perching-daisy mat, AstroTurf, shrubbery, and natural tree branches which not only provide variety, but also help prevent foot problems. Just as your pet dogs and cats love to play with different types of balls and chew toys, animals in the wild play with leaves, twigs, rocks, pine cones, and other items found in nature. To keep WERC's educational birds amused, they're given natural or man-made (non-toxic) items as stuffed and rubber toys to move around and old phone books to rip up with their talons and beaks. Even WERC's gopher and king snakes are provided with tactile enrichment, with rough logs to rub against, smooth rocks to slither over, and gravelly flooring to dig into, all of which not only make their terrariums interesting but help them to shed.
Taste: Sometimes WERC's "kitchen" seems to be right out of Chopped. WERC "chefs" prepare meals for omnivorous Rosie, selecting from a wide variety of food including exotic and seasonal produce such as persimmons and cactus pears, grapes (a favorite)and other fruit, yogurt, and proteins like eggs (hardboiled and scrambled), quail, rodents, and fish-there's always something new to keep her taste buds happy. Pocket gopher Digger relishes corn cobs, fruit and a selection of fresh veggies straight from the garden. Clarabelle the acorn woodpecker fancies unshelled peanuts, with wax worms and pine nuts as a special treat. Zorro normally dines on small rodents for breakfast but enjoys occasional delicacies of ground squirrels, gophers, and road-killed jackrabbits.
Finally, just as people are social beings, so are animals. But while we revel and mingle at holiday parties, animals in captivity socialize with volunteers who talk to them when they're taken for "walkies" (actually the person does the walking while the bird perches on the gloved hand). These strolls outside allow the birds to enjoy the calming sounds of nature and stunning scenery around WERC. Social interaction enrichment also comes when the animals are taken to school programs and public events like the Taste of Morgan Hill. The birds may even socialize with members of their own species when they foster parent an orphaned owlet or eyas (baby hawk).
It's a wonderful bonus that when we enrich these animals' lives, our own lives are enriched as well.
*****************************
A heartfelt THANK YOU to the wonderful WERC team: The volunteers who feed our animals, clean up after them, tend to injuries, build and maintain enclosures, and participate in public events; our veterinarians who donate their expertise and time in the care and treatment of the educational and rehabilitation animals; and our generous supporters without whom these animals lives would not be healthy and enriched.



Colleen Grzan
WERC, the Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Center, provides the community with rehabilitation services for orphaned, injured and sick native wildlife. It is supported solely by donations from businesses and the public. 
© 2015 W.E.R.C- All rights reserved: (408) 779-9372 - www.werc-ca.org - email W.E.R.C.- 501(c)(3) non-profit organization
W.E.R.C., the Wildlife Education and Rehabilitation Center provides the community with rehabilitation services for orphaned, injured and sick native wildlife. Through our educational programs, W.E.R.C. encourages a peaceful coexistence between civilization and our native wildlife.
Federal tax ID #77-0324296
  • Home
    • Wildlife Emergencies >
      • What to do if you find a baby bird
      • Baby Mammal
    • About WERC >
      • Who's who @ WERC
      • WERC Mailing List
      • WERC Policies
      • Related Links
  • Bobcats
    • Bobcat Rehabilitation Program
  • Events and News
    • WildWire
    • Social Links
    • Bird Walk
    • Animal of the Month >
      • Animal of the Month Archives 2008-2015
    • Our Local World
  • EDUCATION
    • Live Animal Programs
    • California Native Americans
    • Educational Ambassadors
  • REHABILITATION
    • Wildlife Rehabilitation Program
  • SUPPORT
    • Donate
    • Wish List
    • Support Our Sponsors
    • Volunteer WERC
  • Contact