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Officials say birds found by Millville residents were killed on purpose & legally
By Dan Stamm
Officials say birds found by Millville residents were killed on purpose & legally
NBC10 Philadelphia - Ted Greenberg
Residents
along Peach Drive in Millville, N.J. found at least 80 birds dead on
the ground Tuesday morning. Officials told NBC10's Ted Greenberg that
they believe the birds were killed on purpose and legally by a nearby
farmer.
Residents in a Cumberland County
community were left wondering Tuesday morning what caused dozens of
birds to drop dead from the sky.
Residents along Peach Drive in
Millville found at least 80 birds -- mostly red-winged blackbirds -- on
the ground dead having fallen from trees and the sky.
"Crazy -- something out of a movie," said resident Michelle Cavalieri who saw the birds fall from the sky.
The birds caused a bloody mess on roadways in the residential neighborhood.
"They’d get up and try and fly and
they were out of control so they’d crash and fall again," said resident
Jim Sinclair. "It was just strange."
Animal control, public health
officials and other emergency crews were on the scene later Tuesday
morning collecting dead birds to try and figure out exactly what caused
so many of them to die.
Cumberland County Public Information
Officer Troy Ferus said Tuesday claiming that it wasn't something
environmental that killed the birds but rather something they ate -- a
granular pesticide put down legally by nearby Ingraldi Farms.
"Preliminary investigation gives us
the impression that.. he had problems with birds," said Ferus earlier in
the day. "He applied for and got a permit for a product that kills
birds and that’s what it seems to have been effective at doing."
Here is the county's press release on the incident:
The Department of Health reports that Monday evening Ingraldi Farms applied a granular pesticide intended and approved to cull birds, causing an unusually high volume of dead birds in the area of Ingraldi Farms and Whitemarsh Estates in Millville.The material used; Avitrol Double Strength Corn Chops (EPA reg. # 11649-5) is approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and intended to be used for bird control for Blackbirds, Brewer's Blackbirds, Cowbirds, Grackles, Red-Winged Blackbirds, Rusty Blackbird, Starlings and Yellow-Headed Blackbirds.In the past, Ingraldi Farms has also used Avian Control (EPA reg. # 33162-1) a ready to use liquid repellent intended to be used for bird control for Geese, Gull, Pigeon, Crows, Starlings, House Sparrows, Blackbirds, Grackles and House Finches.Ingraldi Farms is licensed through the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection to apply pesticides on their farms and has been working with the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife to alleviate the crop damage done by large flocks of birds. Remedies include auditory shock, hunting and pesticides. Ingraldi Farms has estimated a crop loss of $15,000 so far, due to the birds eating their crops.Bird specimens have been collected and are being sent to the NJ-Department of Environmental Protection Laboratory for testing.
No one at Ingraldi Farms would talk to NBC10's Ted Greenberg when he went there for comment.
Officials say the dead birds are not
toxic but that any member of the public that encounters a dead bird
should use gloves when picking it up and wash their hands thoroughly
after handling and disposing of it in the trash.
But they put out a call to residents
Tuesday afternoon that urged residents to remain inside "due to an odor
and the death of several birds in the area."
Recently bird kills have happened in various locations around the world -- possibly none more famous than the New Year’s Eve death of hundreds of blackbirds in Arkansas.
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