Blind seal pup rescued from Vancouver Island beach - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:50 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Blind seal pup rescued from Vancouver Island beach

"Mr. Magoo" is adapting to his new surroundings at the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Centre. The blind seal pup was found, starving and abandoned on a Vancouver Island beach near Courtenay last month.

'Mr. Magoo' found starving, abandoned, now recovering at Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Centre

Lindsaye Akhurst said the cause of the seal pup's blindness is still not known. (Marine Mammal Rescue Centre)

"Mr. Magoo" is adapting to his new surroundings at the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Centre.

The blind, male seal pup was found, starving and abandoned, on a Vancouver Island beach near Courtenay last month.

Rescue centre staff nicknamed it "Mr. Magoo" after the nearsighted cartoon character.

Lindsaye Akhurst, the manager of the centre, told On the Island host Gregor Craigie the seal pup's condition appears to be stabilizing, although it has an upper respiratory tract infection.

The people who found the pup on the beach could tell it was sightless because its fully dilated pupils were green and glowing, like the eyes of a cat in the dark.

Rescue centre manager Lindsaye Akhurst says the blind seal pup will end up in an accredited aquarium or zoo if it can not be released back into the wild. (CBC)

"At this point we're not too sure how long he was blind for," Akhurst said.

"He could have been born blind, but he is a few months old, so we're wondering if something happened in the last few months."

Akhurst said possible causes, including protozoa infection or environmental causes, are being investigated.

Nearly all the animals rescued and rehabilitated at the centre are released back into the wild.

If "Mr. Magoo"survives and it is determined the animal would perish if released, it will eventually be placed in an accredited zoo or aquarium.

Akhurst said staff at the centre usually keep minimal contact with animals destined for release, but they get to work more closely with animals that can't return to the wild.

"So we get to know their personalities a bit more, which is kind of fun for us too," she said.

"Mr. Magoo" is adapting to his new surroundings at the Vancouver Aquarium Marine Mammal Rescue Centre. The blind seal pup was found, starving and abandoned, on a Vancouver Island beach near Courtenay last month.