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The Lint Trap
At 8:15 am on April 8th, Wildlife Rehabilitator Corrie Hines entered my office with a washcloth in her hands. Corrie asked, "What is this, and why was it in our basement?" Upon first glance, I saw what appeared to be a small, fuzzy tail sticking out of the washcloth, and for a moment I thought that Corrie might have captured a shrew. As I uncovered the animal, however, it became immediately clear that the fur coat this animal was wearing did not belong to it.
After grabbing a plastic container from the wildlife center kitchen, I partially filled it with water from the pond that is on the PAWS property. Tap water contains chlorine, fluoride, and other chemicals that might be hazardous to amphibians, so the pond water was less likely to irritate the salamander's skin. After soaking the salamander in the shallow dish of pond water for several minutes, the lint began to loosen it's grip on his body. Using Q-tips, I carefully peeled the lint away. The lint rolled off like a sock and revealed a somewhat dry, disoriented (well, as far as I could tell he was disoriented) Long-toed Salamander.
Although I try to release animals as closely as possible to where they were found, I figured the little Long-toed Salamander would prefer not to be returned to his point of origin in the wildlife center laundry room. Instead I took him to a large brush pile on PAWS property about 100 yards from the wildlife center's basement door. I placed the plastic container on the ground and tilted it so the salamander could exit more easily. He crawled to the edge of the container and looked out at the damp leaf litter that was laid out before him. There he paused for quite some time. As he sat there, it was impossible to determine what type of information he was processing as he decided what to do next.
The Long-toed Salamander was only in PAWS care for a total of 50 minutes. His travel distance from his point of origin was about 40 feet, and his travel distance to his release site was about 100 yards. His injury was not the result of a dramatic event like a car collision, cat attack, or gunshot wound. He was simply a small, damp-skinned wild animal that was nearly killed in an unfortunate encounter with lint. Dramatic or not, his situation really was a matter of life or death, and like thousands of wild animals before him, the Long-toed Salamander received the lifesaving care he needed at the PAWS Wildlife Center. Wild animals released between April 1st and April 19th, 2005: |