Keyword: Carolina Wildlife Center
Photo
BIR053-00465
A king rail (Rallus elegans) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
This bird was found wandering on a football field at Williams-Bryce Stadium at the University of South Carolina.
Photo
BIR053-00464
A king rail (Rallus elegans) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
This bird was found wandering on a football field at Williams-Bryce Stadium at the University of South Carolina.
Photo
BIR053-00463
A king rail (Rallus elegans) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
This bird was found wandering on a football field at Williams-Bryce Stadium at the University of South Carolina.
Photo
BIR053-00462
A king rail (Rallus elegans) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
This bird was found wandering on a football field at Williams-Bryce Stadium at the University of South Carolina.
Photo
BIR053-00461
A king rail (Rallus elegans) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
This bird was found wandering on a football field at Williams-Bryce Stadium at the University of South Carolina.
Photo
BIR053-00460
A northern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos polyglottos) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
Photo
BIR053-00459
A northern mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos polyglottos) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
Photo
ANI031-00223
Juvenile eastern cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus mallurus) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
Photo
ANI031-00222
A juvenile eastern cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus floridanus mallurus) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
Photo
ANI031-00221
A juvenile eastern cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus floridanus mallurus) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.
They get about 3,700 wildlife patients a year, from gray squirrels to opossums to songbirds.
Photo
ANI031-00214
Three juvenile eastern cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus mallurus) at the Carolina Wildlife Center, a place that rescues and rehabilitates injured and orphaned wildlife.