Ocean Beauty Seafoods Profoundly Regrets Bald Eagles Killed in Kodiak
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SEATTLE, Jan. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Ocean Beauty Seafoods LLC wishes to
express the profound regrets of everyone in our organization for the tragic
incident in which several eagles died as a result of attempting to feed on a
truckload of fish waste. We are doing everything in our power to ensure that
the surviving birds get all available care.
"About 28 birds were rescued, and their prospects look good," said Gary
Wheeler of the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge. Wildlife workers in Kodiak
were originally going to continue to care for the birds, but a bird biologist
with the International Bird Rescue Research Center recommend sending the birds
to the rescue center in Anchorage instead. "The folks there have more
expertise," Wheeler said.
So far Ocean Beauty has donated $5,000 to the Bird Treatment and Learning
Center in Anchorage, to assist with the cost of care and heating fuel to keep
the center at the needed temperature for the eagles' rehabilitation. "We are
working to do everything within our means to help with the care and
recuperation of the eagles, and intend to see this through until the birds are
released back into the wild," said Ocean Beauty President Mark Palmer.
Ocean Beauty is also sending fish to the center to feed the birds during
their stay. In addition to these donations for the Anchorage center, Ocean
Beauty is giving $2,000 each to three other raptor centers in Alaska. "We
can't bring them back to life, but we will do all we can to help these
magnificent eagles have the best chance of survival in the wild all across
Alaska," said Palmer.
Ocean Beauty has operated their Kodiak plant for over forty years, and
this is the first incident of substantial bird interference and death in that
time. The truck in question was leaving Ocean Beauty's Kodiak facility en
route to the Kodiak fishmeal plant, where Ocean Beauty has taken fish waste
for nearly thirty years. All of Ocean Beauty's standard procedures for this
waste transfer were followed, which include covering the load for the journey
to the meal plant. This procedure has been to pull the trailer with the waste
out of the plant, then cover while still in the driveway. In this case the
birds went to the waste trailer before the cover could be applied.
"Our procedures have been strengthened over time, to include covering the
loads," says Palmer, "but clearly they need further strengthening. We are in
the process of reviewing and changing these procedures to ensure that such an
incident never happens again. We are in dialog with the federal, state, and
local authorities, and will craft these new standards and procedures using
their input."
Ocean Beauty Seafoods LLC has been in the Alaska seafood industry for
nearly 100 years, and is one of Alaska's largest seafood processors, operating
seven shore side plants across Alaska.
SOURCE Ocean Beauty Seafoods LLC
Tom Sunderland, Director of Marketing of Ocean Beauty Seafoods LLC,
+1-206-795-4613, Tom.Sunderland@Oceanbeauty.com
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