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RAPTOR CENTERS by Jennifer Keats Curtis

RAPTOR CENTERS

From the Animal Helpers series

by Jennifer Keats Curtis

Pub Date: Sept. 10th, 2014
ISBN: 978-1-62855-447-2
Publisher: Arbordale Publishing

This new Animal Helpers book considers raptors that have been injured or need help and the people and centers that care for them.

While the basic definition of a raptor, or bird of prey, is glaringly missing, that is about the only information that seems to be absent from this detailed look at why raptors might need help, how people can provide care for them, and how the birds are either eased back into the wild or trained as ambassadors for wilderness-education programs. When a bird first arrives at a center, it is thoroughly examined with medical instruments and some clever techniques. Helpers monitor their patients daily, providing food, medicine and physical therapy, if needed, and watching to see if the birds can hunt successfully. Baby raptors need special care to ensure that they can be released into the wild. A final section brings the topic home to readers—“Would you like to work with raptors?”—and asks if they could/would do some of the helpers’ (sometimes-unpleasant) tasks. Full-color photographs throughout show the birds and their injuries, the medical staff at work and the recovering raptors. The backmatter extends the learning with activities and more information about raptor-center volunteers and what to do if you find a raptor needing help.

Future animal helpers of all sorts will be en-raptor-ed.

(Informational picture book. 4-8)