1 / 7

Guidelines For Collecting Birdstrike Remains For Species Identification

Guidelines For Collecting Birdstrike Remains For Species Identification. Whole or Partial Carcass - Feathers. Pluck the best variety of feathers available Breast, back, wing, tail include any feathers with color or pattern If have only a small amount of material,

paige
Télécharger la présentation

Guidelines For Collecting Birdstrike Remains For Species Identification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Guidelines For Collecting Birdstrike Remains For Species Identification

  2. Whole or Partial Carcass - Feathers • Pluck the best variety of feathers available • Breast, back, wing, tail • include any feathers with color or pattern • If have only a small amount of material, send all feathers available • Do not cut feathers, plucked feathers usually have down and tissue attached for lab analysis • Photos and field IDs are welcome, but do NOT replace sending feather material

  3. Blood & Tissue (“Snarge”) Collect ALL remains available Use clean collecting supplies Keep remains as dry as possible • Scrape off any dry samples • Wipe material off with alcohol - do not use bleach, water or other cleansers - include all feathers • FTA® DNA collecting cards

  4. FTA® DNA collecting cards • Use sterile applicator to wipe off material • Press applicator to card to transfer material • Allow card and applicator to dry before sealing in bag • Include applicator and any available feathers with the card

  5. Shipping REGULAR SHIPMENT (US Postal Service) Smithsonian Institution Feather Identification Lab E-600, MRC 116 PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 OVERNIGHT SHIPMENT (FED EX, UPS, DHL, etc.) Smithsonian Institution Feather Identification Lab E-600, MRC 116 10th& Constitution Ave., NW Washington, DC 20560 Include AFSAS, WESS, or FAA 5200-7 report Secure all material in re-sealable plastic bag • * SHIPMENT FROM OUTSIDE THE U.S * • Any material from foreign countries must be treated prior to shipment and include the following documents: • 1. Certificate of Origin • 2. Certificate of Treatment • 3. USDA APHIS permit for SI

  6. Do’s & Don’ts Do’s • Collect best variety of material available • Pluck feathers • Use alcohol or FTA® cards to collect snarge • Send dried samples • Use online reporting • Include report number and contact information • Practice good hygiene at all times • Always follow the safety or BASH protocols for your organization Don’t’s • Don’t send single feathers if more material is available • Don’t send carcasses or smelly samples unless frozen and shipped in a cooler overnight • Don’t cut feathers or use tape • Don’t use water, bleach or other cleansers to collect snarge • Don’t send remains without incident report or contact information

  7. Contact Information Feather Identification Lab 202-633-0801 dovec@si.edu whattonj@si.edu heackerm@si.edu dahlanno@si.edu Websites USAF afsafety.af.mil/sef/bash/sefw_home.shtml US Navy safetycenter.navy.mil/aviation/operations/bash Civil http://wildlife-mitigation.tc.faa.gov/wildlife/

More Related