Common murres

A common murre is shown at the Wildlife Center of the North Coast.

As Oregon’s most prevalent seabird, common murres can often be spotted floating offshore or nesting on rocky cliffs. Typically, the birds boast a striking white belly, but on May 19, when one arrived at the Wildlife Center of the North Coast in Olney, a patch of its underside was nearly black, coated with a viscous, tar-like goop.

Researchers still aren’t sure exactly what that goop is, or where it came from.

Loon

Rehabilitation coordinator Ginger Nealon places a keel wrap on a loon.

Wildlife center

Rehabilitation coordinator Ginger Nealon and volunteer Ellison Randall help a bird.

Loon

A loon gets tube fed at the Wildlife Center of the North Coast.

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