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Images tagged "koala"

An injured and dehydrated koala who has been darted with a sedative is captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. He will later be released into a surviving forest.
An injured, rescued koala, en route to triage in Mallacoota.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been darted with a sedative is captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. He will later be released into a surviving forest.
An injured and dehydrated koala is coerced from a tree by scaring him with black flaps and a pole.
An injured and dehydrated koala is coerced from a tree by scaring him with black flaps and a pole.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been sedated and captured is given immediate veterinary care in the field and sent to triage for recuperation and rehabilitation. The koala also had burns on his paws.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been sedated and captured is given immediate veterinary care in the field and sent to triage for recuperation and rehabilitation. The koala also had burns on his paws.
Rescuers hold a blanket under a koala who has been darted and sedated. Though he was safely brought down by an arborist, it’s safest to have a back-up below the tree in case the koala falls.
Burned koalas are darted with a sedative, then captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. They will later be released into a surviving forest.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been darted with a sedative is captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. He will later be released into a surviving forest.
An arborist helping with animal rescues with an injured koala.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been darted with a sedative is captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. He will later be released into a surviving forest.
A skinny and dehydrated koala who has been darted with a sedative is captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. He will later be released into a surviving forest.
Veterinarians Chris Barton and Elaine Ong of Vets for Compassion attach eucalyptus browse into a destroyed eucalyptus tree plantation where surviving koalas perch high in trees. The fresh eucalyptus is tied to the base of trees which lures them down, at which point the rescuers and vets can catch the koala and assess them for injuries. If the animals are kept for rehabilitation, they will later be released to the wild.
Eucalyptus browse attached to a destroyed eucalyptus tree plantation where surviving koalas perch high in trees. The fresh eucalyptus is tied to the base of trees which lures them down, at which point the rescuers and vets can catch the koala and assess them for injuries. If the animals are kept for rehabilitation, they will later be released to the wild.
Veterinarian Chris Barton of Vets for Compassion looking for survivors in a burned eucalyptus plantation.
A ten-month-old koala receives care and treatment at an RSPCA triage site. She lost her mother in the forest fires and her back paws are scorched. She eats browse (leaves) but still breastfeeds so she is being given a milk supplement, and is on pain medications via an IV. Australia, 2020. Jo-Anne McArthur / We Animals Media
Koalas feel much more secure when they can hold on to something tightly. When koalas need to be examined at Southern Cross Wildlife Care, they give them a teddy bear to cling to. This koala was orphaned in the bushfires and is recovering from wounds.
A mother koala and her joey who survived the forest fires in Mallacoota.
Burned koalas are darted with a sedative, then captured and lowered from the tree for veterinary care. They will later be released into a surviving forest.
Veterinarian Chris Barton of Vets for Compassion carries eucalyptus browse into a destroyed eucalyptus tree plantation where surviving koalas perch high in trees. The fresh eucalyptus is tied to the base of trees which lures them down, at which point the rescuers and vets can catch the koala and assess them for injuries. If the animals are kept for rehabilitation, they will later be released to the wild.
A mother koala and her joey who survived the forest fires in Mallacoota.
Koalas feel much more secure when they can hold on to something tightly. When koalas need to be examined at Southern Cross Wildlife Care, they give them a teddy bear to cling to. This koala was orphaned in the bushfires and is recovering from wounds.
An arborist helping with animal rescues with an injured koala.

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