Cat Predation On Birds

What to Do About Your Cat Killing Birds: Steps Today

A cat nearby while a person carefully picks up a small bird on grass with gloves or a towel.

If your cat just brought in a bird, the first thing to do is separate the cat from the bird, then assess whether the bird is alive. If it is alive, contain it in a dark, quiet box and contact a local wildlife rehabilitator right away. Do not feed it, do not give it water, and do not try to treat it yourself. If the bird is clearly dead, use gloves to dispose of it safely and wash your hands thoroughly. From there, your job is to make a plan so it doesn't keep happening.

What to do right now

Gloved rescuer safely holding a small bird after a cat incident, cat secured offscreen behind a closed door.

The window between a cat attack and a bird's death is narrow. Some people wonder, can a cat scare a bird to death, but even when a bird seems fine after an encounter, it can still worsen quickly due to injury and infection risk. Even birds that look fine after a cat grab are usually in serious trouble because cat saliva carries bacteria that cause fatal infections in birds within 24 to 48 hours. So speed matters.

  1. Remove your cat from the area and put it in another room.
  2. Put on gloves before handling the bird.
  3. If the bird is alive but stunned or injured, pick it up by wrapping it gently in a towel or cloth, keeping the wings against its body so it cannot flap and injure itself further.
  4. Place the bird in a cardboard box lined with paper towel or a soft cloth. Make it large enough that the bird isn't crammed in, then drape a towel over it to block out light and reduce stress.
  5. If the bird feels cold, place one end of the box on a heating pad set to low, with the other end off the pad so the bird can move away from the heat if needed.
  6. Do not give the bird food or water. Feeding an incorrect diet can cause additional injury or death, and a bird in shock cannot safely swallow.
  7. Call a local wildlife rehabilitator or wildlife rescue organization immediately. The USFWS wildlife rehabilitation finder and local Audubon chapters are good starting points.
  8. If the bird is dead, use gloves to bag and dispose of it, then disinfect the area with a diluted bleach solution and wash your hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

Signs that a bird is genuinely injured and needs professional help include a drooping wing, visible wounds, blood, labored breathing, discharge from the eyes or nose, inability to stand, or diarrhea. A bird sitting still and looking dazed may just be in shock after the grab, but it still needs a rehabber because of the bacterial risk from cat saliva. Do not wait to see if it 'recovers on its own.'

Why cats kill birds in the first place

Cats are obligate carnivores with deeply wired hunting instincts, and those instincts do not switch off because you feed them a full bowl of kibble twice a day. Hunger and hunting are controlled by separate systems in a cat's brain. A well-fed, indoor cat will still pounce, stalk, and kill given the opportunity. Why did my cat kill a bird? It is usually because hunting instinct and outdoor access let your cat catch and kill prey even when they are well-fed.

Some cats are higher-risk hunters than others. Factors that increase the likelihood of a cat killing birds include outdoor access (especially unsupervised), time spent outside at dawn and dusk when birds are most active, living near gardens or feeders that concentrate bird activity, being young and physically agile, having previously caught birds (learned reinforcement), and not wearing any collar deterrents. Cats allowed outside at night are also significantly more likely to be active hunters.

It is also worth understanding that cats sometimes bring prey home as a 'gift,' not because they are hungry but because the hunting sequence is its own reward. Some cats never learn to make the kill cleanly and leave injured birds behind. That partial predation is often what cat owners find distressing, and it is also the scenario most likely to land a bird in your hands still alive but fatally compromised.

How bad is it? Assessing what happened

Close-up of a small motionless bird on the ground, suggesting possible contamination after a cat encounter.

Any bird that has been in a cat's mouth should be treated as critically injured, even if there are no visible wounds. Cat saliva contains Pasteurella multocida and other bacteria that are almost always lethal to birds without prompt antibiotic treatment, which only a licensed wildlife rehabilitator or avian vet can provide.

A bird sitting completely still on the ground is not always dead or even injured. It may be in shock. Gently watch for chest movement before concluding it is gone. If you see breathing, follow the containment steps above and get it to a rehabber the same day.

A bird with puncture wounds, a broken or drooping wing, blood, trouble breathing, or neurological signs like head tilting or circling needs emergency rehab care, not a wait-and-see approach. The Tufts Wildlife Clinic lists these as clear indicators that a bird needs professional intervention: breathing problems, discharge from eyes or nose, diarrhea, lameness, drooping wing, or inability to stand. If you are seeing any of those, the bird will not recover without help.

How to stop it long-term

No single fix eliminates the risk entirely, but a combination of changes to your cat's access, equipment, and daily routine can dramatically reduce how many birds it kills or injures.

Keeping cats indoors

The most effective single change is limiting or eliminating unsupervised outdoor access. Research published in Nature Communications confirms that outdoor access is the primary driver of wildlife mortality by owned cats. The American Bird Conservancy's Cats Indoors program advocates for indoor-only living, and the evidence strongly supports it. Owned cats still cause substantial wildlife mortality even with some time outdoors, so partial outdoor access is still meaningful risk.

Supervised outdoor options

Person securing an outdoor catio enclosure with simple latches in a quiet backyard

If your cat has always had outdoor time, going cold-turkey indoors can be stressful for both of you. Safe alternatives include harness and leash walks, an enclosed 'catio' (an outdoor cat enclosure attached to the house or free-standing), and supervised yard time where you are physically present. These give cats outdoor stimulation without giving them independent access to wildlife.

Collar deterrents

Two collar-based deterrents have actual evidence behind them. Bells on collars have been shown in controlled studies to reduce predation of wildlife by domestic cats. The Birdsbesafe collar cover, a brightly colored ruff-style addition, reduced the number of birds brought home by 37% in a European study. The CatBib, a small neoprene bib attached to the collar, has also been shown to reduce bird catches by interfering with the final pounce motion. None of these are 100% effective, but stacking them (bell plus CatBib, for example) improves the odds. Make sure any collar used is a quick-release breakaway design.

Enrichment and play

Indoor enrichment does not eliminate hunting instinct, but daily interactive play sessions with wand toys, puzzle feeders, and window perches that give birds-eye views can reduce the restless energy that drives outdoor hunting. Fifteen to twenty minutes of active play twice a day makes a real difference in many cats.

Making your yard and bird setup safer

Backyard before/after: bird feeder near shrubs and fence vs moved open with a baffled pole feeder.

Your home's layout can either concentrate bird activity near your cat's hunting range or spread it out and reduce risk. A few targeted changes make a meaningful difference.

  • Move bird feeders away from dense shrubs, fences, and other cover that cats can use to ambush approaching birds. Open ground around a feeder gives birds time to spot a stalking cat.
  • Place feeders at least 10 feet from any structure a cat could jump from. A pole-mounted feeder with a squirrel baffle also deters cats trying to climb up.
  • Avoid ground-level feeding stations or birdbaths near ground cover if you have outdoor cats in the area.
  • Install physical barriers like wire mesh or hardware cloth around the base of bushes where ground-nesting or low-foraging birds concentrate.
  • During spring nesting season, increase supervision of any outdoor cat time, since fledglings on the ground are especially vulnerable.
  • If you have an enclosed porch or yard, check the perimeter regularly for gaps that a cat could squeeze through.

Window safety (for your birds, not just wild ones)

If you keep pet birds, position their cages away from windows where outdoor cats could be visible, since the stress of seeing a predator pacing outside can itself cause harm. For wild bird window collisions (a separate but related issue), the key is placing deterrent treatments on the outside of the glass, spaced no more than two inches apart in both directions. Decals or tape on the inside of glass generally do not deter birds during daylight. The USFWS also notes that homes with bird feeders are at double the average risk for bird-window collisions, so feeder placement near windows needs extra attention.

Disease and parasite risk: what you actually need to worry about

When your cat kills a bird, there are three parties to think about for health risk: the bird (already covered above), your cat, and you.

Risk to your cat

Cats can become infected with Toxoplasma gondii by eating infected birds or rodents. A cat that hunts and eats prey is at higher risk of acquiring toxoplasmosis and then shedding oocysts in its feces, which is the pathway that poses risk to people. Cats can also pick up intestinal parasites and other pathogens from wild bird prey. If your cat is a regular hunter and eats what it catches, discuss deworming frequency and testing with your vet.

Risk to you

The main human health risks connected to cat predation on birds come from handling the cat or the dead bird, not from watching the event. Cat bites and scratches can transmit Bartonella (cat scratch disease), Capnocytophaga, and other bacteria. Cat scratch disease is most common from kittens and strays, but any cat can transmit it. Capnocytophaga from cat saliva can enter through open wounds, cuts, or mucous membranes. The CDC recommends washing any scratch or bite wound immediately with soap and water.

Avian influenza (bird flu) is worth a brief mention. The risk to most pet cat owners handling a dead backyard songbird is very low, but if you find a dead waterfowl, shorebird, or bird of prey (species more likely to carry H5N1), the Pennsylvania Department of Health and the USFWS both recommend not touching it with bare hands and reporting it to local wildlife authorities rather than handling it yourself. Campylobacter is another bacterial pathogen that can spread through contact with bird or cat feces, so gloves and handwashing after any cleanup are not optional.

The practical rules are simple: wear gloves when handling dead birds or cleaning up after the scene, wash your hands with soap and water afterward every time, keep any open wounds covered, and avoid touching your face during cleanup. These steps cover the realistic risk landscape without needing to panic.

Myths vs. facts: what actually works

ClaimReality
A well-fed cat won't hunt birds.False. Hunger and hunting are separate drives. Cats hunt regardless of how much they are fed.
A single window decal will protect birds from glass collisions.False. Birds will fly around a single sparse decal. Coverage of at least 2x2-inch spacing across the whole glass is needed, applied to the outside surface.
Keeping a cat indoors makes it miserable.Mostly myth. Indoor cats live longer on average and adapt well with adequate enrichment, play, and safe outdoor options like catios.
Punishing a cat after it kills a bird will stop the behavior.False. Cats do not connect delayed punishment to a past action. It causes stress and damages your relationship without reducing hunting.
Bells and collar covers fully prevent bird kills.Partially true. Bells and the Birdsbesafe collar cover both reduce kills in studies, but neither eliminates predation. They are useful layers in a broader plan.
A bird that survived a cat grab is fine if it flies away.False. Even if the bird escapes, cat saliva bacteria typically cause fatal infection within 24 to 48 hours without treatment. Any bird grabbed by a cat needs a rehabber.
You should give an injured bird water to help it.False. Food or water given incorrectly can injure or kill a bird in shock. Warmth and containment are the right immediate steps.
Avian flu is a serious risk for most backyard cat owners.Mostly false for typical songbird contact. Risk is higher with waterfowl or raptors. Gloves and handwashing cover most realistic exposure.

When to call a vet or wildlife rehab

A wildlife rehabilitator in gloves safely receives a small bird from another person at an intake station.

Call a licensed wildlife rehabilitator any time a bird has been in a cat's mouth, even if it looks unhurt. Cat saliva is the issue, not just visible injuries, and time is critical. You can find local rehabilitators through state wildlife agencies, the National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association, or by calling your local Humane Society.

Call your own vet if your cat was injured during the encounter (birds can scratch and peck), if your cat regularly eats prey and you want to update its parasite prevention, or if you are concerned your cat may have contracted something from an obviously sick bird. If your cat bit or scratched you during the chaos of separating them from the bird, clean the wound with soap and water right away and contact your own doctor if the scratch is deep, you have any immune condition, or it shows signs of infection within a few days.

For dead birds that appear to be waterfowl or raptors, or if you find multiple dead birds in one area, contact your state wildlife agency rather than handling them yourself. These are scenarios where avian influenza testing may be warranted.

Your next steps based on your situation

Different households have different starting points. If you are feeling tempted to punish your dog, it is usually more helpful to focus on management and training to prevent future bird deaths rather than blame should i punish my dog for killing a bird. Here is a practical breakdown by common scenario.

Indoor cat that occasionally escapes

Audit the escape routes: door dashing, broken screens, unlatched windows. Fix those first. Then add a collar with a bell as a backup layer for the times you cannot prevent it entirely. Consider a catio as a controlled alternative that gives the cat 'outside' without the hunting access.

Fully outdoor cat

A gradual transition to supervised-only outdoor time is the most realistic path if going fully indoor isn't feasible immediately. Start by cutting out the highest-risk windows: early morning (dawn), late afternoon, and dusk. Add a bell and a CatBib or Birdsbesafe collar cover. Keep the cat inside during spring nesting season if at all possible. Increase indoor enrichment in parallel so the cat is not pacing the door all day.

Porch or yard with bird feeders

Relocate feeders to open areas away from cat ambush cover. Use pole-mounted feeders with baffles. Supervise any outdoor cat time during feeder hours. If you have a screened porch where the cat hangs out, make sure birds cannot fly into the screen and become trapped. Keep the cat inside when feeders are most active, typically early morning.

There is no perfect solution here, and being honest about that is more useful than pretending one fix will end it. What the research and wildlife care community are clear about is this: limit outdoor access, use collar deterrents as a backup, move bird activity away from cat ambush zones, and have a clear plan for injured birds when incidents do happen. That combination, applied consistently, is what actually moves the needle.

FAQ

If I see my cat catch a bird but it drops it right away, what should I do immediately?

Treat it as critically injured anyway. Keep the bird contained in a dark, quiet box and contact a wildlife rehabilitator the same day, even if it seems alert, because injury and infection risks can worsen within 24 to 48 hours after cat saliva exposure.

How do I tell whether a bird is in shock versus actually dead?

Check for breathing by watching the chest closely for several seconds, not just by looking for movement on the ground. If there is any breathing, contain and contact a rehabilitator immediately. If there is no breathing and the bird is clearly rigid, proceed with safe disposal using gloves.

Is it okay to give the bird water or food while I wait for a rehabilitator?

No. Do not feed or give water, because struggling, aspiration, and stress can worsen an injury. The safest interim step is containment in a quiet dark box and fast handoff to professional care.

Can I wrap a live injured bird in a towel to keep it still?

Only if the bird is already contained and you can minimize handling. Prefer a dark, quiet box over towels, because tight wrapping can increase breathing issues. If you must move it, use gentle support, avoid covering the nostrils or throat, and contact the rehabber for exact guidance.

What if the bird is small and hard to grab, and I can’t catch it quickly?

Don’t chase it around your home. Close doors to create a small safe area, then place a box nearby and guide it in. The goal is to avoid prolonged handling and to keep the bird calm until you can transfer it to a rehabilitator.

Should I try to treat infections or puncture wounds on my own if the bird looks okay?

No. Cat saliva bacteria are the main problem, and they typically require prescription antibiotics and close assessment by an avian vet or wildlife rehabilitator. DIY treatment can delay necessary care.

Do I need to worry about my cat after killing a bird if it does not eat it?

Yes, because cats can still get bites, scratches, or saliva exposure on fur and paws during separation. If your cat has any puncture wounds or you notice sudden lethargy or fever, contact your vet. If your cat does eat prey, ask about parasite testing and an appropriate deworming schedule.

Is it safe to let my cat groom its own fur after a bird incident?

It is usually okay, but watch for contamination. If the cat has visible blood or saliva residue, you may want to gently clean affected areas with pet-safe wipes or a veterinarian-recommended method, then monitor for mouth sores or vomiting.

What’s the safest way to clean up if the bird is already dead and on the floor?

Wear gloves, avoid sweeping or dry wiping that can aerosolize particles, then clean with soap and water. If you use disinfectant, choose a pet-safe product and follow label contact times, and keep children and other pets away until surfaces are dry.

What should I do if my cat scratched or bit me while I was trying to separate them?

Wash immediately with soap and running water, even if it seems minor. Seek medical advice promptly if the wound is deep, on the hand or face, you have immune issues, or you see worsening redness, swelling, pus, fever, or streaking after a couple of days.

My cat brings home birds but never leaves them dead, what’s the risk difference compared to a fully dead bird?

The risk is similar or worse. A bird that is still alive but compromised can be exposed to cat saliva, puncture wounds, and stress, which can progress quickly. Treat any bird from the cat’s mouth as an emergency and contact a rehabilitator.

What should I do if I find multiple dead birds in one area or one bird looks very ill?

Do not handle bare-handed. Contact your state wildlife agency for guidance, especially for waterfowl, shorebirds, raptors, or clusters of deaths, since additional testing and biosecurity steps may be recommended.

Will collar deterrents work even if my cat is extremely agile or determined?

They can still help, but assume they are not perfect. Use quick-release breakaway collars, and consider stacking methods (for example, bell plus a collar cover) rather than relying on one device, since learned behavior and different hunting styles can reduce effectiveness.

How long should I keep changes in place before judging whether they worked?

Track incidents for at least a few weeks, ideally before and after you change outdoor access or feeder placement. Hunting success can vary by season, time of day, and bird abundance, so short-term results can be misleading.

Citations

  1. Tufts Wildlife Clinic guidance says not to give an injured bird food or water, because feeding an incorrect diet can result in injury or death.

    https://vet.tufts.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/found-wildlife/what-do-if-you-found-sick-or-injured-songbirds

  2. Tufts Wildlife Clinic guidance advises keeping a cold bird warm by placing it in a shoebox with one end on a towel over a heating pad set on low (instead of giving food/water).

    https://vet.tufs.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/found-wildlife/what-do-if-you-found-sick-or-injured-songbirds

  3. Audubon advises placing the bird in a quiet place and calling a local wildlife rehabilitator; it also instructs not to offer food or water.

    https://www.audubon.org/debs-park/about-us/what-do-if-you-find-injured-or-orphaned-bird

  4. Audubon notes you should not attempt to feed or give water to young birds (and generally advises calling a rehabber).

    https://www.audubon.org/debs-park/about-us/what-do-if-you-find-injured-or-orphaned-bird

  5. Cummings/Wildlife care guidance emphasizes warmth/containment and “do not give food or water,” and to contact a local wildlife rehabilitator as soon as possible.

    https://vet.tufts.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/found-wildlife/what-do-if-you-found-sick-or-injured-songbirds

  6. Golden Gate Bird Alliance says to use a towel or washcloth to grasp the bird around the shoulders so the wings are against the body and cannot flap, and it also says not to provide food/water/first aid.

    https://goldengatebirdalliance.org/birding-resources/birding-information/injured-birds/

  7. Golden Gate Bird Alliance instructs that if the bird hasn’t recovered, you should take it at once to a wildlife rescue organization (and it reiterates not to provide food/water).

    https://goldengatebirdalliance.org/birding-resources/birding-information/injured-birds/

  8. CDC’s “Healthy Pets, Healthy People” guidance for cats says to wash hands after handling or cleaning up after cats and after contact with cat saliva or poop, and also that cat bites/scratches can spread germs.

    https://www.cdc.gov/healthy-pets/about/cats.html

  9. CDC’s cat scratch disease page says clean scratch wounds with soap and water and that people should avoid cat scratches, bites, and licks—especially from kittens or stray cats.

    https://www.cdc.gov/bartonella/about/about-cat-scratch-disease.html

  10. CDC’s Yellow Book (zoonotic exposures) notes that human exposure to saliva and other body fluids can occur through bites/scratches/cuts or contact with mucous membranes (eyes/mouth), and it highlights the importance of washing hands after being around animals even if you didn’t touch them.

    https://www.cdc.gov/yellow-book/hcp/environmental-hazards-risks/zoonotic-exposures.html

  11. CDC’s general environmental-cleaning guidance for blood spills (CDC environmental cleaning procedures for health-care) provides a bleach-disinfection approach (chlorine-based disinfectants around 1:10–1:100 depending on concentration/size of spill) and stresses keeping disinfectant wet for required contact time.

    https://www.cdc.gov/healthcare-associated-infections/hcp/cleaning-global/procedures.html

  12. A Nature Communications paper (Loss et al.) states that limiting/preventing outdoor access is one of the “simple solutions” it supports, and it estimates that owned cats still cause substantial wildlife mortality even with some indoor time.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms2380

  13. A Frontiers/Ecology & Evolution paper reports a study in which the Birdsbesafe collar cover (BBScc) and bells were tested; it reports that the BBScc reduced the number of birds brought home by 37% (probability of reduction 88%) in a continental European setting.

    https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2022.850442/full

  14. A 2002 Journal of Zoology study (as a PDF) concludes that bells reduce predation of wildlife by domestic cats (bell-on-collar experimental design).

    https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/309A628A702A4F098FD7A2FDB284C3DC/S0952836902000109a.pdf/bells_reduce_predation_of_wildlife_by_domestic_cats_felis_catus.pdf

  15. A 2015 study about drivers of perceived vs actual predation notes that predictors compiled for cat predatory behavior include whether the cat had a bell, estimated time spent outside, whether cats were allowed outside at night, and other factors (as variables).

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4541982/

  16. American Bird Conservancy states that keeping cats indoors is a key strategy (Cats Indoors program) and it advocates safe supervised outdoor options like leashes, strollers, and enclosed “catios.”

    https://abcbirds.org/program/cats-indoors/

  17. American Bird Conservancy’s “Glass Collisions Products” guidance includes a testing/installation note that for decals applied to windows, 2-inch by 2-inch spacing is recommended for pattern application.

    https://abcbirds.org/products

  18. American Bird Conservancy’s “Solutions for Homes” page reiterates correct spacing patterns and references the ideal two-inch-by-two-inch rule for window treatments.

    https://abcbirds.org/strategies/solutions-for-homes/

  19. Audubon (re window collisions) explains that birds may need many closely spaced decals on large windows, and discusses building guidelines and actions that reduce collisions.

    https://www.audubon.org/news/help-birds-avoid-deadly-collision

  20. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (PDF) states that homes with bird feeders are at double the risk for bird-window collisions, and it cautions that window blinds or decals installed on the inside generally do not deter birds during the day.

    https://www.fws.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025-01/01.29.2025-learn-more-about-bird-window-collisions-vyfwc.pdf

  21. Home & Garden Information Center (Clemson/US extension) states that markings/treatments such as decals or tape are more effective when placed outside and that spacing no greater than 2x2 inches is recommended.

    https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/reducing-bird-strikes-at-your-home/

  22. Best Friends Animal Society advises that if a bird is visibly injured or acting off, a licensed wildlife rehabilitator will likely need to intervene; it also provides guidance about using a warm box/heat pad setup and preparing for transport.

    https://bestfriends.org/pet-care-resources/how-help-injured-wild-bird

  23. Golden Gate Bird Alliance instructs to put an injured bird in a warm, dark, quiet place like a shoebox lined with cloth/paper towel and to not attempt food/water/first aid; it also notes nighttime handling/overnight options.

    https://goldengatebirdalliance.org/birding-resources/birding-information/injured-birds/

  24. Tufts Wildlife Clinic’s guidance emphasizes that cold birds should be gently warmed in a shoebox and that you should contact a local wildlife rehabilitator.

    https://vet.tufts.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/found-wildlife/what-do-if-you-found-sick-or-injured-songbirds

  25. CDC’s toxoplasmosis page states that toxoplasmosis is spread via animal-to-human (zoonotic) routes including ingestion of oocysts/contaminated food; it also notes cats can become infected by eating infected birds/rodents and that people can become infected through contact with cat feces containing Toxoplasma.

    https://www.cdc.gov/toxoplasmosis/causes/index.html

  26. CDC’s Toxoplasmosis-related cat owner PDF emphasizes that cats get Toxoplasma by eating infected rodents/birds and that it relates to infection risk pathways (supporting guidance for prevention).

    https://www.cdc.gov/parasites/toxoplasmosis/resources/printresources/catowners.pdf

  27. CDC Campylobacter guidance notes that infection can occur from contact with dog or cat feces and that people at increased risk include those who work with animals, including birds or poultry.

    https://www.cdc.gov/campylobacter/hcp/clinical-overview/index.html

  28. CDC’s Campylobacter general page provides context that Campylobacter is a common cause of diarrheal illness in the U.S. (useful for framing hygiene precautions after animal contacts).

    https://www.cdc.gov/campylobacter/index.html

  29. US National Park Service guidance on bird flu (avian influenza) states that people with job-related or recreational exposures to infected animals have higher risk, and it describes that infected birds can pass virus on and that wildlife collection/testing may occur.

    https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/bird-flu.htm

  30. Maine IFW avian influenza page notes that avian influenza type A viruses occur naturally among waterfowl/shorebird species and that it rarely infects humans, but it includes practical guidance about what to do if you find sick/injured/dead birds.

    https://www.maine.gov/ifw/fish-wildlife/wildlife/living-with-wildlife/diseases/avian-influenza.html

  31. Pennsylvania Department of Health’s H5N1 page provides practical risk guidance (e.g., avoid eating/drinking/touching your face while handling animals; if you find sick or dead wild birds, do not touch).

    https://www.pa.gov/agencies/health/diseases-conditions/infectious-disease/respiratory-viruses/flu/h5n1

  32. CDC’s Capnocytophaga page states it can make people sick if a dog/cat saliva gets into an open wound or sore, and it advises washing bite areas right away with soap and water.

    https://www.cdc.gov/capnocytophaga/about/index.html

  33. CDC’s Healthy Pets, Healthy People page for cats says wash your hands after contact with cat saliva or poop and after cleaning up/handling cats.

    https://www.cdc.gov/healthy-pets/about/cats.html

  34. Best Friends Animal Society advises setting up a box for transport and keeping conditions quiet/warm/dark; it emphasizes getting injured birds help from a rehabilitator when they’re injured/sick.

    https://bestfriends.org/pet-care-resources/how-help-injured-wild-bird

  35. The Raptor Trust (handling/transport FAQ) states that the safest way to contain and transport most injured birds is in a cardboard box large enough that the bird is not tightly confined and to drape a towel to create a visual barrier; it emphasizes warm, quiet, dark containment.

    https://www.theraptortrust.org/faqs/capturing-handling-and-transporting-injured-birds

  36. Cummings “How to tell if wildlife is truly sick or injured” (Tufts Wildlife Clinic) lists abnormalities suggesting illness/injury such as breathing problems, discharge from eyes/nose, diarrhea, lameness, drooping wing, or inability to stand.

    https://vet.tufts.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/how-tell-if-wildlife-truly-sick-or-injured

  37. Cummings “What To Do If You Found Sick or Injured Songbirds” gives a concrete step: use a shoebox with towel/heating pad when cold and do not give food/water.

    https://vet.tufts.edu/tufts-wildlife-clinic/found-wildlife/what-do-if-you-found-sick-or-injured-songbirds

  38. American Bird Conservancy (FAQs/Getting clear on birds and glass) states that spacing and placement and which side of the glass treatments are applied matter, and it notes that a single decal may be enough for humans but birds may fly around a sparse single decal—so coverage matters.

    https://abcbirds.org/strategies/getting-clear-on-birds-and-glass/

  39. Science-based collar deterrents: Murdoch University records a study outcome that adding CatBib™ (collar pounce protector) reduced birds caught; the source page reports Cats can be stopped from catching birds by the device (quantified).

    https://researchportal.murdoch.edu.au/esploro/outputs/journalArticle/Reducing-the-rate-of-predation-on/991005544096707891

  40. American Bird Conservancy’s Cats Indoors program emphasizes indoor-only policies and safe supervised outdoor containment alternatives (e.g., catios/leashes/strollers/backpacks).

    https://abcbirds.org/program/cats-indoors/

  41. American Bird Conservancy’s “Glass Collisions Products” guidance includes that decals are intended for ordinary window glass and that placement/testing notes depend on window coatings; it also repeats recommended spacing (2x2 inches).

    https://abcbirds.org/products

  42. USFWS PDF states window decals/blinds installed on the inside generally do not deter birds during the day, reinforcing the need to place treatments properly.

    https://www.fws.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025-01/01.29.2025-learn-more-about-bird-window-collisions-vyfwc.pdf

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Bird Causes Plane Crash? Risk, Mechanisms, Myths, Prevention
Bird Causes Plane Crash? Risk, Mechanisms, Myths, Prevention

Whether bird strikes can cause plane crashes, how they happen, real risk data, debunked myths, and prevention steps