Meredith Sampson, Wildlife Rehabilitator
To mark World Wildlife Day, celebrated in
March, and its 2020 theme “Sustaining all life on Earth,” we feature Meredith
Sampson, wildlife rehabilitator, who was interviewed by Project volunteer Sally
McHale on June 5, 2018.
Meredith Sampson is a wildlife rehabilitator and environmental educator. She oversees the non-profit Wild Wings, LLC and is often the person called upon to help when someone encounters a lost, injured, or orphaned baby bird, squirrel, or owl. It is not unusual for her to find small animals left at her door by a well-meaning person who is uncertain of what to do to help them.
With birds, Ms. Sampson advises
people to first determine the baby bird’s condition and age. If it is uninjured
and not too young, it can be placed near the nest area so that the bird’s
parents may do their job of caring for it. Excessive handling, feeding, or
moving of the bird can put it in a more precarious position. If, however, the
animal is in need of care, Ms. Sampson suggests “If you’ve found injured or
orphaned wildlife, or wildlife that you think might need help, get it into a
secure container that’s well ventilated and put it somewhere in a quiet, warm
place, and keep it away from people and pets. Then call me.” After rehabilitating
the bird, Ms. Sampson would then release it into its habitat.
Ms. Sampson also initiated the First
Sunday Bird Walks at Greenwich Point Park in 2005 under the original
co-sponsorship of Wild Wings, the Bruce Museum, and Greenwich Audubon Center. As
of 2019, Friends of Greenwich Point became co-sponsor with Wild Wings. These
bird walks are free and open to the public of all ages. They provide an
opportunity to experience the amazing biodiversity of Greenwich Point with its
beach, meadows, woodlands, and marshes. “It’s an extraordinary place. It’s like
nature’s classroom,” says Meredith Sampson. It provides an opportunity to
appreciate the effects of climate change on various species and the migration
patterns of birds, as well as many other aspects of nature that may be
otherwise overlooked in our day-to-day busy lives. In addition to observing
bird life, participants observe the seasonal changes of insects including
butterflies, plants, and other animals.
Ms. Sampson also works with Audubon
Center to do annual Christmas and summer bird counts in our local area. She has
been performing this valuable service for almost forty years and has counted as
many as seventy species in one area alone. Over the years, she has observed how
changes in our environment have affected native species. “Whatever is happening
in the environment can affect bird populations and this is something we need to
pay attention to.” For example, Ms. Sampson describes how the results of
certain bird species counts may differ dramatically from year to year due to
various causes—some understood, others not. For example, when the West Nile
virus became prevalent in our area in 1999, there was a dramatic drop in the
bird count of crows and a number were found that were unable to stand or fly
and were having seizures before dying. After animal autopsies at University of
Connecticut at Storrs and extensive research, it was determined that the crows
had contracted a virus that had infected an exotic bird from Africa housed at
the Bronx Zoo and was carried by mosquitoes to other bird species and,
subsequently, to humans.
Questions arise when the migration
patterns of certain bird species changes. For example, why are wood thrushes no
longer prevalent in our area? What happened to the population of
yellow-throated warblers that used to be here in far greater number? Has their
southern habitat been deforested? These are only some of the questions which
can arise as one keenly observes the environment as Meredith Sampson does. She
underscores the importance of understanding the relationship between what we do
to our environment and how that affects the species that inhabit it.
Ms. Sampson also is a proponent of
replanting native plants, trees, and shrubs in order to continue to provide the
food and shelter that our birds and animals need to survive. This includes
planting milkweed which monarch butterflies depend on for food. She supports the removal of invasive plant
species like garlic mustard and porcelain berry that choke our native ones.
“The key factors of a successful habitat is that it provides shelter, food, and
opportunity to reproduce. If any one of these links is broken, we witness
dramatic effects,” she tells us.
In her interview, Ms. Sampson
recounts many unusual and often humorous situations in her career as a wildlife
rescuer and rehabilitator. One is the story of a creative rescue in Greenwich
Point. It involved Ms. Sampson with a 60-foot-high crane, a wicker basket from
McArdle’s Florist & Garden Center, and a hapless baby owl that had fallen from its ill-made nest. Find
out additional details by reading the transcript of her interview.
We have much to learn from the
wealth of experience Meredith Sampson brings to our understanding of wildlife
and its relationship to our environment. As she has said, “We need to seriously
restore habitat and create new habitat. We’ve got to treat this earth with a
lot more kindness... This is the only planet we have, the only home that we
have. And this, all this, is what sustains us.”
Mary
Jacobson, OHP blog writer and editor
As
with all our interview transcripts, the Meredith Sampson transcript may be read
at Greenwich Library and is available for purchase at the Oral History Project
office. The Oral History Project is sponsored by the Friends of the Greenwich
Library. Visit the OHP website at glohistory.org.
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