Beauty and the Bionic Beak [UPDATED - Beak attached]
Posted: 05 May 2008 04:12 PM   [ Ignore ]
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Disfigured bald eagle to get a bionic beak

ST. MARIES, Idaho - She has been named Beauty, though this eagle is anything but. Part of Beauty’s beak was shot off several years ago, leaving her with a stump that is useless for hunting food. A team of volunteers is working to attach an artificial beak to the disfigured bird, in an effort to keep her alive.

“For Beauty it’s like using only one chopstick to eat. It can’t be done” said biologist Jane Fink Cantwell, who operates a raptor recovery center in this Idaho Panhandle town. “She has trouble drinking. She can’t preen her feathers. That’s all about to change.”

Cantwell has spent the past two years assembling a team to design and build an artificial beak. They plan to attach it to Beauty next month. With the beak, the 7-year-old bald eagle could live to the age of 50, although not in the wild.

“She could not survive in the wild without human intervention,” Cantwell said.

The 15-pound eagle was found in 2005 scrounging for food and slowly starving to death at a landfill in Alaska. Most of her curved upper beak had been shot away, leaving her tongue and sinuses exposed. She could not clutch or tear at food.

Beauty was taken to a bird recovery center in Anchorage, where she was hand-fed for two years while her caretakers waited in vain for a new beak to grow.

“They had exhausted their resources and she would likely be euthanized,” Cantwell said.

[More...]

Lots more of this story at the link.  There are many really neat parts (as well as inspiring).

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Posted: 06 May 2008 02:51 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Awwww. Poor Beauty.
I hope the artificial beak works. It’s a shame that she wouldn’t be able to live in the wild, but it would still help her so much…

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Posted: 06 May 2008 04:46 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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Whoever shot her needs to be shot!  I hope too that the artificial beak will work.  I know that when birds get cracks and large chips or part of a single beak damaged, new artificial pieces or fills are cemented in and they work well. 

Erik has a former student working in Florida with the dolphin whose tail fin was caught in netting and torn off.  She was trying to swim the say sharks do, side to side instead of up and down and that movement can seriously damage the spine of a dolphin.  They made a prosthetic fin for her and she’s now learning to use it and swim properly.  It can’t be on all the time since it’s attached a little like human limbs which cause stress to the surrounding tissues and bone, so she’ll always be in captivility, but watching her use her new fin is amazing.

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Posted: 06 May 2008 05:12 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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I swear I watched a documentary on this years ago. Or at least another eagle w/ a prothestic beak, but in the documentary they had affixed it to the bird already, so it has to be a different one.

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Posted: 06 May 2008 06:29 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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hulitoons - 06 May 2008 04:46 AM

Whoever shot her needs to be shot! .

Isnt that a little bit harsh? thats pretty much like PETA. though the beak how would they attach it.just asking.

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Posted: 06 May 2008 06:37 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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Well, according to the article, glue. And then if that doesn’t work, tiny screws through her beak stub.

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Posted: 09 June 2008 03:22 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 6 ]
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Beauty got her beak, though it looks like she’ll be getting a permanent one.  Pictures at the link. smile

Eagle wounded by poacher gets new beak, new look

More than three years after a poacher shot off her upper beak, a bald eagle named Beauty can finally live up to her name — with the help of volunteers. A team attached an artificial beak to the 15-pound eagle in mid-May, improving her appearance and, more importantly, helping her grasp food.

“She’s got a grill,” joked Nate Calvin, the Boise engineer who spent 200 hours designing the complex beak.

The “grill” was exposed when a bit of the synthetic beak broke off during application. But the new beak is only a temporary fix, designed to nail down precise measurements.

A final beak made of tougher material will be created and attached later, though her saviors don’t plan to release her back into the wild. They say that she has spent too much time with humans that the final beak will still not be strong enough to tear flesh from prey.

But getting this artificial beak now was key to Beauty’s survival. A wild eagle that must be hand-fed by humans would eventually have to be euthanized, especially since her life span could run four more decades, said Jane Fink Cantwell, who took Beauty to her raptor recovery center in Idaho two years ago.

The bird was found in 2005 scrounging for food and slowly starving at a landfill in Alaska. A bullet had taken from her curved upper beak, leaving her tongue and sinuses exposed, with a stump useless for grasping food. Cantwell said eating with her beak was like using one chopstick.

She also had trouble drinking and couldn’t preen her feathers.

Beauty was taken to a bird recovery center in Anchorage, where she was hand-fed while her caretakers waited in vain for a new beak to grow. Cantwell in 2007 agreed to take the eagle to her Birds of Prey Northwest ranch. Every day she used tongs to feed Beauty food, such as strips of salmon.

During a speaking engagement in Boise, she met Calvin, who offered to design an artificial beak.

“As an engineer, as a human being first, I was interested in helping it out,” Calvin said.

Molds were made of the remaining beak and scanned into a computer so the artificial beak could be created accurately.

The nylon-composite beak will help the bird drink and grip food.

Some critics question such an extraordinary effort to save one bird that is no longer on the endangered species list. But Cantwell pointed out that Beauty has the potential to breed or be a foster mother to orphaned eagles.

Cantwell also plans to use the bird at lectures around the country to teach people not to shoot at raptors.

The procedure took place in the garage of Cantwell’s neighbor, in front of reporters and guests.

Beauty was laid on her back, fully conscious, with a ribbon of veterinary wrap around her wings. Her talons were wrapped in a leather strap.

“Everybody better be still and quiet,” Cantwell told visitors. “Let’s be mindful she’s a nervous, wild animal.”

A gold and titanium pin was glued to the remnant of her upper beak to serve as the guide for sliding the artificial beak into place.

The volunteers moved slowly and talked softly as they slipped the beak on and off, making minor adjustments. A grinder, sander and scissors were used to trim both the artificial beak and the existing remnant of upper beak. The bird sometimes nipped harmlessly at their hands.

About an hour and a half into the procedure, Beauty lurched upright and spread her wings, snapping the wrap. She hovered above the table, screeching, with Cantwell and the other handler holding the leather straps.

After a couple of minutes, they calmed the eagle and got her back onto the table, then completed the procedure.

The Boeing Co. and a maker of synthetic skin in California have volunteered to help make the permanent beak.

After the surgery, Cantwell cradled the eagle and prepared to return Beauty to her aviary, saying: “The eagle has landed, and she has a beak.”

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Posted: 09 June 2008 03:31 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 7 ]
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I saw a couple videos yesterday of the beak and during the fitting and Beauty hollered at the doctor putting it on but she looks SO adorable!  She was beautiful before, but I think she enjoys having her beak.  I’ll be glad when they make the final one that will be permanent.

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Posted: 09 June 2008 03:33 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 8 ]
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Oh, I’m glad she’s doing all right. smile

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Posted: 10 June 2008 03:54 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 9 ]
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Its cute
i thought it was a real beak

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Posted: 10 June 2008 10:13 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 10 ]
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Oh, I’m so glad!

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