The patient is wrapped in a blanket and carried to the surgical table, where it is sedated and intubated. Dr. Renee Schott carefully probes the shotgun wounds under the wing with her gloved fingers and picks away dead tissue bit by bit. By the time the wound is packed with saline-soaked gauze and the surgery is done for the day, there is healthy pink flesh.
The badly wounded trumpeter swan was found in a pond near Waconia and delivered on May 20 to the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in Roseville where Schott, 31, is a staff veterinarian.
The swan, a member of a protected "threatened" species, had three shotgun pellets in its body, and the wounds under its left wing were filled with maggots and severely infected. Two shoulder blades had been previously broken and healed.
"The wound is very, very bad, and so it doesn't have a great prognosis," Schott said. "We're trying because of his attitude. He's one of our feistiest swans."
The Wildlife Rehabilitation Center treats about 50 trumpeter swans each year, most because of lead poisoning from eating fisherman-discarded lead sinkers at the bottom of a lake or pond. Occasionally, a bird will fly into power lines and suffer broken bones. Some are shot, with the perpetrators often claiming they were shooting at snow geese.
"It's very difficult to confuse it with a goose," Schott said. "There's a giant size difference. For them to make that mistake I think is just ignorance and not a true mistake. I'm not sure why people would want [to shoot] trumpeter swans. But they're loud. And they poop a lot."
Trumpeter swans are no longer considered endangered. Still, it's a misdemeanor to shoot one. In 2007, a man was charged with killing a trumpeter swan in Carver County. Last year, officials asked for the public's help after two were killed.
To the rescue
If it weren't for Nina Salveson's rescue mission, the bird surely would have died a slow and painful death, Schott said.